OCR Text |
Show THE PAGE SIX COAST PUBLISHER HERALD-JOURNA- LOGAN, UTAH, L, Its Here That Legalized Wine MAY SATURDAY, 6, 1 933. First Lady Takes Pilots Seat 18,457 FLIERS AMONG SOVIETS GET LICENSES RESENTS ARREST WASHINGTON df Airplane pilots holding active Depaitment of Commerce licenses numbered 18,45? on April 1. according to Col Clarence M Young, assistant secretary of the department for On April 1, 1932, there aviation were 17.028 licensed pilots. The department had issued licenses for 7 004 planes on April 1, 1933, a slight decrease from the 7.476 total of a year ago The total number of planes of which the department had record on April 1. licensed and unlicensed planes, was 9,086, compared with 10,672 a year before Of the total pilots menses recorded this year, 599 were held hv women. California led the states for total number of plane. both licensed and ui licensed, with 9s5, while New York was second, with 94b, and Pennsylvania, with 537, wax third New York was the eader ir Ik em-eaircraft, having 850. followed by California, with and 824, Pennsylvania, with 459 H F Smithson, Cal, publisher of Beverly Hills, comSmithsonian ot the ana need s of children publishers pany. gave books, claims that rememhim something Finlay to ber it by " After eating his breakfast in a lo.al cafe, Mr Smithson was met by a young boy who informed him lie was under arrest lor puking his pierce Airow too close to the curb, (fueationii.g the boy s authority, Mi Smithson was shown llie star on the bo s vest Still under the npiession that it roust lie a fake badge and not iculi.inp that Preston had Ulr ted its got eminent ojer to a gtoup of voting boys. Ml Smithson got into bis car und drove ovei !., one of the schools when- be turns, u led some business. Hemming to his no he toum1 thut hts Culifuinut l.e is,- - pluter had been removed A note sign d PRF3TON Pic-rto- I - ' ' 1 BOOTH the folluwmg receipt. '.Mr Smith received ot it (ill for pm It ing in the gutter winng and resisting the officer May !, 1133. Don Handy. clerk Mr. Smithson, who ft els keenly the humiliation of the episode, explained bis resentment of the attuir to seveial l'reston people. He feels that some matura judgment should have been present to guide the euthusmsm of youth at an attractively arranged lunch- fchotr. r. and Mrs. M R. Hovey of were Millville visitors on Sunday. Mrs. George Glenn of Wellsville visited her mother, Mrs. Matilda Larson, Sunday. Mrs. Martin Olson entertained at dlnneg on Sunday, the occasion being her birthday anniversary. The guests included Mrs. Cleo Barlow and daughter, La Conna, Loyul and Kenneth Olson of Salt Lake City, Mr. and Mrs. William Surrey and daughter, Venice of laigan and Mrs. G. H. Jet sop and Mrs. George Cummings of Nihley. Mrs. Joseph S Jessop is visiting and at the home of her daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Victor F.schler of Ogden. Mr. and Mrs. Eschler are the parents of a new daughter born recently. Miss Beatrice Fergus returned home Tuesday evening from Black-foo- t, Idaho, where she has spent the past six weeks visiting relatives and friends. The M. I. A. will hold ward honor, Tuesday evening, Mav 9 at k p. in. A program has been arranged by tne presidents, A. R. Hovey and Jessie Jessop. The public is invited to attend. Dancing will follow the program. Mrs. Harry Hoodless entertained a few friends at her home Luncheon was . Monday afternoon. served to ten guests. D. F. Goggaus of Great Falls, Mont., arrived here Thursday evening to join Mrs. Goggans who is at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Johnson. Ivogun n Work tn saving lives wot these two telephone company employes the annual Vail medaL Mrs. Of ace Tarrant, operator at Culver City, Cal, saved a woman by noting her voice was weak and she failed to hang up the receiver. Sensing clanger, she summoned a doctor, who revived her. Gaston L. Floux, equipment man at San Jose, Cal., saved from death a man burned by a gasoline exploilon. E-- l" Scamlinii-vmrm- . PARIS, Mav 6 deirpmlimts of the original Norxemer Britishers whose forebears fought at Hastings, umi Freni hmeri will join hamis, June 2 to 9, to celebrate the month of the establishment of Normandy as a geographic, and ethnic entity Presiden) Librtin will be present On his arrival in the picturesque Normandy town of he wd! be greeted by "William the Conqueror and his knights. The Coutances fetes begin on June 8 with a'Yeconhtitutlon" of the now extinct Normandy parliament, and a tableau representing the ancient trades and erafts The following day will see famous Norman dukes swaggering qown the streets, accompanied by their bodyguards Among the more reiebiated characters depicted will be Duke William Long St. Louis. King FranSword, King cis I, Admiral Tourville. A mock Norman wedding, as staged a thousand years ago, wil! be performed in the town square, with costumes historically correct. Legalized wine -- 4 per tent bv volume In alcoholic content has been evolved, and California's fitst shipment hus been dispatched to President Roosevelt. Miss .lane Hatred la shown drinking a toast just before Uie assoitment of Mont Rouge wines wav sent east by the Adulated Wine Co.'i of California. j Here's More About tails, in every case, within fifteen minutes of eonvhtion, and g.n rotting ceased suddenly San Francisios vigilance committees used the rope, without botheiing about court proie. hire, and criminals immediately decided that Nun Francisco was not a desirable resilience Chicago must make its choice between rule by gangs ami rule h the citizens and tin ir courts Cheerful news meets you at Omaha, on the way here ami signs of pi asperity arc all along the line, through Nebraska L. B Tobin, aubhsher of the Omaha proud o i ins c:ty and state tells you that Omaha, second hugest livestock market in the world, Chicago first, of course, has annual receipts ranging as high as eight million sevu hundred and fifty thousand 'head of cattle sheep and hogs. of the stock is Over three-fifth- s Omaha processed in packing houses, which means employment for Omaha. In addition, Omaha is omy of the country's principal grain centers, handling 28,000,000 bushels of wheat a year, and it is the largest butter manufacturing city In the world and therefor the world's largest distributor of vitailuns. It is the fourth railroad center in the United States, with ten trunk lines, bringing traffic to Omaha over 73.250 mile i of Hark. And Omnlm has momy. 39th In population among American "cities, it stands 19th in annual bank clearings. , Bee-New- letting them know ibout it, in Says lie: I lisve just ordered u solid eight page udyertisement for next Monday. That eight page advertisement we shall follow up with full page advertisements. Ulirn you are in business, do not leave too much to the public imagination. Tell them uhout it. Thut plan is recommended to other iiierrhants who wonder what Is wrong with husiness. In connection with the proposed hour week, 6 hour day, five days ''work," Mr Biandeis presents a theoiy which many young He says gentlemen will abhor. hard work does not hurt anybody. He used to work in the Chicago Boston Store for Charles Netchar thp owner, when Mr Netcher slept evpry night on the hard counter, and sent out for his meals. Bran-nets and Netcher used to arrange furniture, rugs, etc. on the sidewalk. in front of the store, before sunrise, to attract business. Later, when Mr. Netcher married (his widow runs the store now) Brandeis took the job of sleeping in the store. "But says Brandeis, "I was a sybarite, compared with Netcher, and I used to get blankets from the bedding department, sleep with them on the counter, and put ttym back, tn tha moving, Most Important, prices and prosPrice of Neperity me rising braska farm products on the far.u have increased from 28 to' 212 per cent. Corn, from eight cents, and less to 2k cents, wheat from 20 cents to 55 cents, cgRs from 7 to eleven cents a dozen, oats from .5 to 15 et nts a bushel, hogs front $2x5 to $3 65 per hundred wegltl. And the best of it ns that farmers will get a large pait of the increased values They still hold on their farms, unsold, and now in active demand, farm products that have increased in value by more than fifty-on- e million dollars. There is money in circulation, and George Brandeis, able merchant of Omaha knows it. With his young associate. Karl Louis, he presents interesting facts and figures, including the fact that he realizes the importance of first getting what the people want, then well-nig- s, 31 Hie First laijy of the Lind sat beside America's First Lady of the Air as .Mrs. FtanUin 1) Roosevelt went for a night flight over Washington and lldltlmoie wnli Amelia Eurhart. The above picture shows Mrs. Roosevelt sealed at the controls in the pilots Irene Castle Is Back on Stage ! NEW HAVEN, Conn. ilPi When Mrs Jane N. Tuttle died in 1914 no will was found, and her son, Arthur Tuttle, succeeded to the estate. Recently a will made by Mrs. Tuttle in 1898 wag found among the effects of a dead man. In the will Mrs. Tuttle bequeathed her estate to a grandson, Phillip Tuttle The estate will be reopened jn probate court and the lost will filed. s 4 . -- . (U.Pi-de PHILADELPHIA, Schweinltz, social service worker, says that modernism is even invading the time honored childish game of playing house. "Instead of putting dolly to bed," he told the Kiwanls club, ''they now pretend one is the landlord and the other Is the tenant who has no rent. Carl , HERE'S MORE ABOUT COLLEGE TO GET(Continued from - page one) a storm of protests from the farming states and from farm organ- izations throughout the country, as these oigamzations have long regarded these agencies as fundamental to successful farming enterprise and a3 essential to the rehabilitation o: agriculture. These groups pointed out that it would be unwise to develop an agricultural relief program while injuring so seriously such basic igrioultural institutions. President Peterson . is highly pleased with Governor Bloods telegram which indicated the result of the Governor's work on this problem during his weeks in Washington. It now appears that the experiment station and the extension division of the college will continue to Junction normally. Both departments have been vital in Utah's agricultural development, and naturally the college authorities viewed the possibility of their serious injury through the withdrawal of federal funds as decidedly dangerous to Utah agriculture Approximately of the funds which support the extension service come from federal sources, arid approximately sixty per cent of the experiment stations funds eonie troin the federal government. There was never any danger that the work of the Utah State Agricultural college, a resident educational institution, would be threatened, according to President Peterson because most of the funds used in the teaching activities of the college comes from the state. However, there is an annual federal grant to land-gracolleges for teaching purposes and the assurance that this fund will not be seriously curtailed is highly gratifying (n The institutional authorities. . OPPOSED TO SIX HOUR DAY WASHINGTON, May 8 mining men are opposed to the six hour working day, according to testimony of A G Mackenzie. sectetary of the Utah chapter of the American Mining (URt-Ut- ah Charged with mischievous conRussell duct, Rigby Lindquist, Jensen and Luther Pedersen pleaded guilty in city court Saturday morning before City Judge Jesse P. Rich. will be pronounced Sentence Monday at 11:30 a. m. Mrs. H. R. McGee and Mrs. J. Hayward are spending the week-enin Salt Lake City. Logan Stake Honor d Nights Arranged Logan stake honor nigHt will be held May 16 and 17 rather than next Tuesday night as originally The Primary health allow of announced, according to J. L. the Logan Eighth ward was held Montrose, of the activity commitFriday evening at the ward hall. tee of the stake M.I.A. A special feature of the program The events will cover two days ..rhythm band tluccLcd . by of competition and will be climaxMiss Ruby Nielsen. ed by a dance at the Palais d Or at 8:30 p. m Wednesday. May Honor night was held at the 17. and exact time of contests Eighth ward chapel Tuesday eve- willPlaces he announced later. a Miss Thelma Waite gave ning retold story. Ray and Bell Reeder participated in the M mens pub- INDIAN REMAINS UNCOVERED lic speaking contest. Miss Leota BUFFALO, N. Y. (U.R) A stones Barrus and Miss Margaret Johnson were entered in the Gleaner throw from the spot where the of the Cayugas were pitchgirls public speaking contest. The tepees 100 years ago, farmers uncovwinners were Thelma Waite, Ray ed Indians Reeder and Margaret Johnson. Aft- ered the remains of four Cheekto-wagin the town of er the contests a dancing party recently near here The skeitons was held in the amusement hall. wer said to he almost perfect Clutched in the fingers specimens The I'.SA'C. Scribble eluh will of one was a rusty knife and u meet Sunday ut 3 30 p in. at the gob of pigment weighing almost a residence of Austin Fife pound. waa .... Montroses Federal Ave., Phone 999 Hoover Dealers Utah Logan 33 THE Newhouse Hotel Back on the stage for the first time In ten years. Mrs. Irene Castle McLaughlin is shown here as she rehearsed her role tor a benefit performance In Chicago. Its proceeds will go to her haven tor pets and stray auiumla SALT LAKE CITY in The ('enter Of Things! DAY TO BE CELEBRATED FRANKLIN, Idaho, (I I -- "Idaho celebrated Day" will be fittingly here June 15, the 73rd anniversary of the town's founding. Although still small, Franklin, located hull a mile from the Utah border, was cite nrsi permanent settlement in what later became the State of daho What A First Class Hotel Should Offer 1 No woman need buy GUARANTEED THIRD RADIO REPAIRING - - today. The dew COMFORT. the Newhouse Hotel you will find every comfort, every service and every convenience that the experienced, traveler discriminating desires. Large guest rooms flooded with daylight gives entrancing views of city, valley and The Newhouse Hotel Cafe and mountains. Cafeteria are noted for an excellent cruisine and superlative service. So that your visit may be most pleasant, we see that every detail contributing to your comfort is right. At 1112 complete As an introductory feature we will check your radio Free of Charge Until May 20! Only authorized Phslco and General Mutor Auto Radio Service in Northern Utah and Southern Idaho. J..J. J. J. EDWARDS EDWARDS WINTON it. JONES cleaners. Downpayment now lower Single Rate Plus 30r Radio Rcpaiiing department under the personal supervision of J. J. Edwards and Winston Jones Introductory Offer than ever before. Monthly payments reduced. Liberal allowance for old electric Intermountain Double Rate the installation of a Singh .... Double .. $1."0 All Outside 2-5- $noo $2)0 $400 $20 $400 $450 Each with Private Bath. $200 NEWHOUSE President E. Sutton Genl Mgr, V. 450 HOOVER It Keats... HOTEL $ Cample it with Dusting Tools er Du sletu Room Garage Facilities Adjoining. Mrs. J. II. Waters d Hoover, more cient than ever, offers the scientific cleaning of Positive Agitation at a lower price ONLY Offering Following Special We are happy lo announce Popular-Price- effi-- - (Continued) PHONE 330 or makeshift cleaner a CHAT two-thir- To wind the clock in the Cleveland (O) market house, its caretaker. Percy Schuler, climbs 333 steps, dodges an pendulum and turns a crank for 45 minutes. Guilty To Mischief Marriage licenses 'nave been issued through the office of County Clerk C V. Mohr to Chester Draper Younker and Margaret Watson, both of Logan; Richard Sharon Tate, Tooele, and Vivian Eatel-l- a Bird, Salt Lake City; Lorus Kirkbnde, Dayton and Wanda Eva Manning, Preston. here first. We have sold nearly 100 Hoovers in this city, and we are Riving service to the owners. No such record has been made by previous Hoover dealers in Logan even when busiTHE ness was good! DEPRES SION WAS AWFlL. It was hard to sell these Hoovers. We are now in a position to make som profit pn our Hoover franchise, yes, we have a Hoover AND franchise WE CHALLENGE YOU TO DlsritOVE IT! We have all .the late model Hoovers on hand at standard price. a, COMMANDER TO RETIRE KENOSHA, Wis. r Pi After 25 years service with the navy, including battles against Chinese bandits and Nicaraguan rebels, Lieut. Com. Lawrence P. Bischoff of Kenosha will be automatically retired July 1. He was graduated from the Naval Academy at Annapolis in 1912 in the same class with Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd. BOTTLE IDENTIFIED HOQUIAM, Wash, n Pi R Saito, Japanese merchant, identified a card found in a bottle by Charles Marquart at North Cove near here. He identified it as a tidal and current recorder from the Japanese nautical experiment station at Okinawa Province, Southern Japan. Logan Youths Plead Mr. and Mrs. O. Whitney Young of Salt Lake City were last weekend guests of Miss Afton Thain. Becoming Modern e, Logan, I d m A Challenge! h ... W. Workers Say Games All that will seem dull to many young Americans, whose motto is "Why should I kill myself?" But George Brandeis has not killed himself. At fify-fivhe drives hm automobile to his cattle ranch 350 miles from Omaha, leaving home before daybreak, gets there in time for lunch rides his horses nil afternoon,' and drives back at night. And, like Netcher, Allman, Mar; shall Field. Gmhel, Wanamaker and thousands of other hard workers, he has made u big fortune and is HIS OWN BOSS. Thai is better than being bossed by some one else all your life; if only for six hours a day. About Town Lost Wili Gives Estate To Another 1 life-givi- (Phone Employes Win Hero Awards j BIRTHDAY M TODAY eon at her home Friday afternoon A social afternoon was spent. Covers were placed for 12 guests. A number of Millville people attended the funeral services of the baby daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Nielson at Nihley on Friday afternoon. Principal H. R. Adams and Mr Bradshaw, members of the Hyrum stake high council, were the speakers at sacrament meeting, Sunday A duet and chorus, afternoon. "Jesus, Lover of My Soul was rendered by Bishop Franklin Blt-- f and Rozella Garr and the pros-ecutlo- n Five-Yea- (Continued from Page 1) Mr, and Mrs. M. P, Yeatea, Jack Yeates anti Miss Dorothy Jenkins of Salt Lake City were visitors ut the home of Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Cutler, Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs David Jessop and baby have gone to Green River, for an indefinite visit. YVyo.. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Taggart of Salt Lake City were over-nigguests of Mr and Mrs. Jerome Taggart, Saturday evening Mrs. Faye Jessop was hostess BY ENGF.NE LYONS United Press Staff Correspondent MOSCOW, May 6 UPSligbt, but perhaps sig.ufieant, symptoms of improvement in the general situation here can be discerned, at least in the largest cities. Whether they will fulfill tne promise oi a somewhat easier existence for the Soviet population depends upon the next harvest of the special "closed" Some shops have Degun to issue rations of cheese and fish A chain of has "commercial ' shops begun the limited sole of meat, sugar und other foodstuffs IVIt'KOV EM ENT A distinct improvement can be felt in the availability of products of light industry, such as clothes, furniture, hardware, etc. The appearance of a larger supgoods, if it ply of manufactured should prove more than a flash tn the pun. will do more than any amount of rapitul punishment to sUmul.ue pease it produ tion The causes of the critical ecoin the Soviet union nomic line-umust he sought nos only in the internal policies By this time it is Chairman of the Senate subcomclear that the nation has ueeu mittee probing the delay In of Joseph W. Harrlman, hard till by the general world criformer bead ot the closed Harri-ma- n sis National Bank, New York, Is EAR IluAN hit r Rlun committed Senator Hubert D. Stephens of The the country to vast expenditures Mississippi, shown bere as Lbs Inabroad lor muchiuery, equipment quiry proceeded. end ruw imperials. The undertakiAustralias eucalyptus tree keeps ng did not seem beyond Ruisia's i apueity to pay' out of its surplus its leaves all the time, shedding The collapse instead its bark. I'grarian products. ol world markets, however, upset The surplus all the call ulatmns did not .suffice ami the Kremlin pegan to deprive the population The effect of this of necessities. state of affairs on living condi-mn- s was disastrous The second basic cause is in the Who is this distrihulor of rats collectivization excessive That rate, as Communists insist, lh Hoover for the State may have been unavoidable. The of Utah and their loeal fact remains that it created a "socialized sector" before the country representative? was ripe for it and before the colgovernment could reward the We have no quarrel with lectivized peasants for their sacrifice of private land with a more you and we welcome you ample life. hut we were to p NORMANDY HAS gutter and lesistmg an fmolfuer de-A and boy judge lined him it in mint manded bis piesence be teceived Saturday, fur whuh K H Heads Bank Probe IMPROVEMENT SEEN ms it Sweeps... ms it Cleans Montrose 33 West Chauneey Ass't Genl Mgr, W'. O Federal Ave. PHONE 999 Logan Utah |