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Show The THE WEATHER UTAH Tuesday, ture. Unsettled toingat and lit1 le change in temper i- GRAIN RANGE Herald-Journa- l PRICE FIVE CENTS. fn) z MERRY GO-ROUN- A Daily UfHH D Picture of Whats Going On in National Affairs By 9 PHEW PEARSON and ROBERT S. Al.T.EN AS11INGTO Not sine hi in Roosevelt, inauguration speech, proposed to drive the out of the temple have there been such a horde of VV N money-change- the in halls of Congress. They crowd every hotel, slop over into the boarding houses, jam into every train entering Washof ington. The most effective them operate not only in Washington, but also through contacts back in every state, where they additional pressure upon bring Congressmen and Senators. When public attention is not focused upon them, these modern Janizaries are the real rulers of the Washington They take the tickets, turn the creaking machinery off and on, call the tunes and danglo the brass ring before the grasping riders. It is significant that now, for the first time during the Roosevelt administration, the lobbyists aro bold and brazen. Before this they were present in the background, but afraid to lift their Even the lobby against heads. the stock market bill last year, which was immense and effective, kept as much as possible in the background. But now it is different. And the most significant thing behind this change is the change in public sentiment, or at least in that part of public ment, which is vocal. merry-go-roun- ft , FACES I R PUYALLUP, Vtash., July 13 (U.P.i Chief of Police Frank H. Uhadwiek and Policeman V. Storem of Puyallup were shot to death this afternoon by a peeing bank robber believed to have been William Mahal , sought for the kidnaping of George W'eyerhauser. The man, traveling alone in a speeding blue sedan, opened fire on the officers as they attempted to flag his car at the Piece County Poor Farm, near Summer. They dropped dead beneath a hail of revolver shots. -r HERE 1 pro-groa- fa United Press Staff Correspondent ROME. July 15 Italy mov ed to increase its fighting strength on land, air and sea today in refor 'fthiop'un military taliation preparation.'' Premier Mussolini called 30.000 more men to the colors and began constructing 10 new submarines The ministry of war moved in unison with the air and naval industries to mobilize resource;, of Italy for the threatened struggle with Abyssinia. Two new divisions of 15.000 men each were given i.iobi'i; uion orders. thus bringing Italy's total of combat troops either in east Africa or en route to Italian colonies there to approximately IbO.OiO. In addition to this number, Itaiy has large numbers of native troops in Eritrea and Italian Somaliland which border Abyssinia on two sides. In addition to the two divisions which will sail for East Africa, two reserve divisions were ordered up to take their places in the home defense force of Italy. Th navy acted to support the campaign in array's Africa, with naval ministry issuto ing orders for construction begin immediately on 10 submarines which will be launched in November of this year. Additional pilots and aeronautical specialists were ordered to report immediately for service, by the order of the air ministry also ordered mobilization of motor of the and mechanics drivers classes of 1909, 1910 and 1912. long-await- MOON ECLIPSE TO BE SEEN TONIGHT Tile eclipse of the moon will terribegin in interniountain tory at sunset tonight and 'the until process will continue about 8:12 p. m. when it will shadow. into the earths pass Total eclipse will be at 9:09 last until 10:50 m. will and p. p. m. with the darkest period 8? ; 10 p. ni. m Logan Nurse Places High In State Exams nine-year-o- SAYS Hale Family Reunion Set for July MARRIAGE LICENSES marriage license has been issued to Ross Summers, 20, Paradise, and Janet Cook, 17, Avon. A C 1M, McNaht Sydit- U. - Dairy Information Italy Strengthens All African King To Be To Commemorate ApIts Fighting Aided By Harlem Margaret Waley To Forces pearance of Elijah Recruits Be Sentenced In 1836 Wednesday 11V THOMAS B. MORGAN B CHARLES KKHARliS TACOMA, Wash., July 15 UMh Margaret Thulin Waley, 19, will receive a long prison term but not life imprisonment for her part in the kidnaping of George Weyerhaeuser, attorneys believed today. The blonde Utah girl, convicted of conspiracy to violate the Lindbergh law, will come before Federal Judge E. E. Cushman for sentence Wednesday. Widely Separated Maximum punishment under the law is life. Cushman, however, inFORGOTTEN Three years ago when Roose- dicated he would make her punishment shorter, perhaps 45 years, velt denounced the sentiment was rabidly the term to which he sentenced ers bitter not only against the bank- her husband, Harmon Metz Waley, ers and against big business, but 25. Imprisonment will put almost ( Continued On Page 5) the width of the continent between the husband and wife, who said they were drawn into the abduction plot by William Mahan, alias SCHOOL BIDS TO Dainerd, now a fugitive. Waley is serving a term at McNeil Island penitentiary, on Puget Sound, not BE OPENED far from the Tacoma home of John Philip Weyerhaeuser and his son, the kidnaped boy. Mrs. Waley will be taken to the federal womBids on the proposed addition for the North Cache high en's penitentiary at Alderson, W. school, to be constructed at an Va. No Protest estimated cost of $25,000, will be Mrs. Waley made no protest opened Tuesday by the Cache when the jury brought in its vercounty board of education, accord-dict after little more than six ing to Lloyd M. Theurer, clerk, The structure is one of four in- hours of deliberation Saturday. She cluded in a $106,000 building had testified she preferred imprischeduled for the district. sonment C2 freedom because the school-nou- s four-rooon Contracts fugitive Mahan had threatened to at Benson and Mendon kill her if she told anything about wore let several weeks ago, while the crime. It was her confession, bids on the proposed four-roomade after her arrest in Salt Lake building at College will be an- City, that broke the case for fednounced in the near future. eral agents. The Tuesday meeting will take John F. Dore, Seattle attorney the place of the regular meeting who defended Mrs. Waley, charged scheduled for Thursday of this that her husband refused to testiweek, Theurer announced. fy in her defense because he had not slept the night before he was to have gene or the stand and was "nervous. Dore previously had explained in court that he hesitated to place on the stand a witness whom he considered "a liar and a perjurer." Lillian Leishman, daughter of Appeal Uncertain Mr. and Mrs. George W. LeishDore still was uncertain whether man, 419 South Main Street, ar- to appeal the conviction on the rived in Logan Sunday for a visit that the Lindbergh la with her parents. Miss Leishman grounds was unconstitutional in assuming graduated recently from the L. D. that kidnap victim held over seven S. hospital nursing school in Salt days must have been transported Lake City. across state line. Testimony at In state exams presented for the triala was that the last Utah throughout graduates had been taken to Tacoma week. Miss Leishman placed sixth. Idaho before boy being held in a SpokShe has accepted a position at the ane house until his father paid L.D.S. hospital. $200,000 for his release. He was of Mahan and the in the bands Waleys from noon. May 24, until early in the morning of June 1. Mahan has dropped from sight since escaping from Butter, Mont., police June 9. It was reported shortly after Mrs. Waleys trial ended that he would be in custody within a few days, but federal agents refused to discuss their search for the former bank robber accused of having engineered the SANTA MONICA, Cal, July northwests first majbr kidnaping. 15 California has been lucky The fugitive had about $90,000 of we escaped the winds, the the ransom money in his possesfloods, the drouths and the sion but none of it has appeared but pestilence heat, finally in circulation so far as could bj us, the caught learned. on us in tram loads, of the 35 hundred lawyers American Bar association are here eating us out of house and heme. They are here, they 19, 20, 21 say, "to save the constitution, to preserve state rights. What they ought to be here for, that Members of the Jonathan H. would make this convention Hale family organization will immortal, is to kick the crooks in their annual family remeet out of their profession, they union Friday, Saturday and Sunshould recommend a law that day. July It. 20 and 21. at the every case that went on trial Girls camp in Logan canyon, it the lawyer defending should has been announced by officers of be tried first, then if he came the organization. clear, he was eligible to defend. As it is now, they are Special programs have been prepared for each day of the reunion. trying the wrong man. All are members of the family Yours urged to be present. money-chang- Experiment Workers T o Reveal Valuable 'Negroes Enlist To Aid Mussolini LDNP' Pa Increases War Forces G CAMBRIDGE. Mass., Harvard scientists July 15 prepared today to study the total eclipse of the moon early tomorrow. The eclipse will begin at 12:09 a. m. edt, reaching totality about 1 a. m. Fifty minutes later the eclipse wi?l end. Meteorologists have more to learn from the Lunar eciipse than astronomers, said Dr. Fred L. Whipple of Harvard observatory. When the earth gets between the sun and tile moon, be explained, the only solar light reaching the moon is that which filters through the earth's outer atmosphere. By studying that light meteorologists can learn much about atmospheric conditions. The more dust and clouds there are in the upper regions, the less of the refracted that sunlight reaches the moon, all of which is of interest to those who study the weather. They may be able to learn how cloudy it is in the faraway north and south polar regions where they have no tipsters and may learn how diffused is the dust that was stirred up in dust recent the storms. Given a fair night, persons in the United States and western Europe will see the moon lose its natural brightness and change gradually to a dull red as the earth's shadow shades it. What solar light does reach the moon is shorn of its blue rays as it filters through the earth's atmosphere. Only the red rays reach the moon. Boise Hen Knows t How To Keep Cool BOISE, July 13 (U.P.i Ray Castle had four hens on his property near Boise. He did not own them for commercial purposes but received enough eggs to supply his family and a few friends. Yesterday the thermometer soared to 11)3 and three of Castles hens passed out. Castle found their bodies In the yard, and immediately set out to find the fourth. Hen No. 4 was found peacefully squatting neck deep in a watering trough. United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, July 15 U'lu Black mails Harlem hastened re- -' of a "Black fruiting today to defend Legion," Ethiopia against Italy Patriotic exaltation swept the largest negro community with a fervor seldom given a white man s land. Recruiting redoubled in half a dozen spots as reyoungsters sponded by scores to the passion of a cause. Sparks from the urban fiame for "African freedom jumped into the deep south a3 far as Texas. Estimate of the number of "black legionnaires" leaped today to around 2,500. One negro grouD reported enlistment of 15 doctors 50 and An nurses. auxiliary movement to boycot Italian-mad- e goods gained headway. Arrangements were being made for a training camp near Montrose, N. Y. A drive proceeded to supply every barefoot Abyssinian soldier with a pair of shoes. Women s groups were being organized to knit for our people. Blood called to blood. in "Legionnaires swaggering uniform colored Harlem's Lenox Avenue with bright green shirts, Sam Brown belts, grey breeches and white sun helmets. Warlike from walls posters screamed around enlistment stations. Reality of feeling at a Sunday night mass meeting swayed impromptu speeches to passionate flights. Contact with an Ethiopian repwas resentative at Washington Col. Shaves openly intimated. Richardson said the aid of American negroes in event of Italian attack had been welcomed in that the legion Abyssinia, and would embark as tourists. Expert legal guidance for the movement was evident. Leaders of six groups sponsoring it emphasized that its unofficial nature avoids violatior of international law the or opening possible, it was pointed out. for interference by immigration officials. Leaders called upon their race to Knock out Mussolini like Joe Louis did Carnera." Other typical expressions: If we dont organize now, our women and children will curse our tombstone. I like the word African. No more negroes and an shines coons! African! Some of you men are nothing but pants." from a wizened colored woman. You go bustin up the avenue and don't know what it's all about. What is dyin when you die for a cause?" Clergymen joined in urging the race to fight to prevent the last indepenstronghold of African dence from becoming "another nation of slaves for the white man. re . LITTLE NOISE AT Program For Dairy Day At College Tomorrow Decision to present another i Dairymen from the areas of the state have been of tremendous ligious pageant invited to the dairy experimental .sometime proportions in Logan m. a. 1(1:00 at next April or May has been made farm of the Utah experiment staAssembly Dairy Experimental Farm, tion tomorrow to hear of the latDirector William Peterson, chairman. by the presidencies of the Logan and the Cache stakes. The matter est research work being done and was decided following a suggesto discuss problems pertaining to 0 ::;u a. m. Some Aspects of the Farm Address, tion for such a piesenlatum by an industry which yields this state Problem, President Elmer G. Peterson. annuallthe presidencies of toe genealog$6,240,000 approximately ical committees of the Logan and ym. a. Need in The of Sires a K:l.) Proving Dairy the Cache stakes. The days program will be held Sound Breeding Program," Professor George The 1936 pageant will be conat the farm where records, anicerned with the life and mission B. Caine. mals, exhibits and equipment have of Elijah, one of the greatest of been prepared to give an insight the Old Testimont prophets. The m. "Bangs Abortion Eradication Program, :0a into the valuable work now being of the pageant will presentation carried on at the Utah station, Dr. D. E. Madsen. be in observance of the 100th anunder the direction of Professors niversary of the appearance of 1 1 :20 George B. Caine and George Q. A Dairy Cattle Breeders Responsibility i. m. Elijah to Joseph Smith and Oliver Bateman. Cowdery at the first ''Mormon to 1 1 is Fellow Dairymen, C. W. Robinson, At 10 a. m. the visitors will asOhio. April temple in Kirtland, western representative, Guernsey Breeders semble at tbe farm north of the 3. 1836. The date for the preassociation. college. They will be welcomed by sentation of the Logan pageant Director William Peterson. Speakhas not as yet been definitely de1 1 ers for the morning meeting are a. m. Results Obtained bv Feeding Three Difcided upon, according to M. R. President E. G. Peterson, ProfesHovey, secretary of the Logan ferent Home Grown Rations, Professor sor Cane, Dr. D. E. Madsen, C. W. Chamber of Commerce and first Rc Mnson, western representative George Q. Bateman. counsellor in the Logan stake of the Guernsey Breeders associawho is committee, genealogical 12:30 p. m. Luncheon. tion and Professor Bateman. one of the prime movers of the pageant. It is intimated, however, Following a dairy luncheon, the m. 1:30 Pasture Mixtures, Dr. R. J. Evans. p. that the presentation will not be following will continue the proon the date of the anniversary Fertilization of Pastures and Results Obgram Dr. R. J. Evans, Professor D. W. Pittman, Professor Batesince that date would interfere D. W. Pittman. Professor tained, man and Director Peterson. with the annual general conferCows on Profes"Feeding Dairy Pasture, ence of the Church of Jesus County agricultural agents have sor Bateman. Christ of Latter-da- y Saints. been working in cooperation with A meeting was held in the General discussion and summary, Director the station in helping farmers to Chamber of Commerce last week make arrangements to attend the Peterson. under the direction of H. B. Professor dairy day program. Campbell and P. P. Black, presiCaine said. Indications are that dents, respectively, of the Logan will be represented from dairymen anCthe Cache stake genealogical ENGLISH STRING QUARTET-- TO as far south .as ..Juab county, and committees. J. Karl Wood, prinfar east as Wasatch; also, a as cipal of the South Cache Semiis delegation large expected from nary and author of the majestic LECTURES HERE Lake, Weber, Morgan, Box TONIGHT Salt 1934 pageant staged in Logan for Elder and Cache counties. more than two weeks, was present at the meeting. Mr. Wood That poetry is an art outside of agr d to Degin preparation An announcement of unusual inis a great w pageant immediately so the normal interests t' Dr. Edward terest to Logan musicians is that actual rehearsals could begin fallacy, declared of the appearance of the Chicago .rly in 1936. It is intimated that Davison, eminent English poet and String Quartet, which the pageant, from a production critic in an address before sum- Symphonic mer session students at the Utah comes to the Utah State Agricu- NEARS COMPLETION standpoint, will far excel the 1931 State ltural college tonight at 8 oclock. Agricultural college this pageant which received univeisal The concert which will be presentmorning. acclaim. His address was the first of a ed by this Chicago ensemble will Present at the original meeting series Brick work on the Logan of three to be given at the be given in the College auditorium, for the 1936 pageant planning will be completed Wedto H. is Dr. J. He also to scheduled according Linford, college. were also Mr. Hovey, H. C. nesday, according to Berntson'and of Director the Summer Session. and appear Tuesday Wednesday Maughan, who had charge of the at the college auditorium The quurtet is composed of three Kuhre, contractors. electrical arrangement last year, morning a1: It a m With the completion of the of the Chicago Symmembers and Gunnar Rasmuson. Dr. Davison addressed his re- phony Orchestra, trained with this brick work the finish of the job. which calls d marks principally to teachers, usfor refacing the old organization under ing as his subject An Approach the baton of its eminent conducpostoffice building, laying of new ELLIS AND LUND to Poetry. He quoted several de- tor. These three are Ben M. Good-sel- l, sidewalk and erection of a 60 finitions of poetry from great veteran soloist and composer, foot flagpole, will be in sight. and poets of the world and and Carl The new sidewalks on the south Rink, violinists; and HELD MURDER critics v then explained their inadequate-nes.Rudolph Reiners, viola. The cell- and west sides of the building were the first to be completed ist with the quartet is Vera The best method in judging whose technique, per- after which the base of the flagOGDEN. July 15 poetry, he believes, is to get into sonal charm, and interpretive abil- pole in the northwest corner of with first degree murder, Jack mind a half dozen examples of the ity have won the admiration of tbe lot was laid and the brick; tried poetry and then audiences wherever she has Ellis, 22 and Fred J. Lund, 21, most laying begun. examine the work to see if it were held in jail here today Each is individually a Upon completion of the bricka kindred feeling with brilliant soloist and together they laying the stone section of the exinvestigated their ac- creates oneself in tivities the form an ensemble that is finely terior will be refaced and the intermountam area. "Poetry," he declared, "is feel- balanced and rich in distinctive flag pole put in place. Lund and Ellis are charged ing witnin one; not black marks charm. with murdering Patrolman Josepb on a piece of paper." Tickets for the concert can be The art existed outside of liter- secured at the Registrar's Office H. Quigley here early Friday i IN ature before found were its long at the College. way Summer school LOGAN They Saturday captured near Brigham City after a sen- into records through the medium students will be admitted free, and in sational man-hua of the poetic transtoriners he said. admission which to the general public posse of 100 men and an airplane He traced the history of the old will be 25c. ballads, showing that they had participated. Quigley was taken for a typical been an intimate part of the lives of former generations. This argugangland ride when he attempted HELD David W. Sutton of Logan, sang io apprehend a pair of gasoline ment he used to show that poetry not is for few a one of the principal roles in the be to believed Ellis and "peculiar people thieves, concert version of Flotows opera, The simple Lund. Noticing a hose and can but for everyone. Martha, produced recently by the from an automobile rhyme schemes that have been extending Brigham Young university summer parked in the residential section, taught to small children are not beneath lyric poetry, he said. student body. Quigley leaped from his prowl far and chorus numbered car to the rumble seat of the Dr. Davison scoffed at the busiFuneral services were held L. 58.Principals ness man who he ig a maintains An orchestra of 28 also parother machine. It sped away. Cove ward chapel Thursday the in the performance, which Later Quigleys body, bearing four ( Continued Ott afternoon for Hazen Poulsen Al- ticipated Page 8) bullet wounds, was found lying ni len. Then choir sang and other drew a crowd that packed College to hall an Ogden street. the doors. The opera was musical numbers were a vocal solo directed by Professor William F. While a police posse searched by Maxine Allen of Smithfield, marshes north of Willard, where a mixed quartet from Swan Lake, Hanson, head of the department the death car was found, Chief of and a quartet from the Cleveland of public school music, who is Police Jack M. Burt of Brigham ward. Speakers who spoke of the known as the composer of "The 1 City, located Lund and Ellis hidfine character of Mr. Allen were: Sun Dance and two other Indian ing in the brush of a canyon W. J. Harrison, Vern operas. Bishop Both admitted their identity but Adams of Cleveland, and Bishop obUnited States Weather refused to answer questions conL. H. Allen. Prayers were offerservatory figures continue to ed by F. R. Titensor and J. K. cerning the murder of Quigley. show Friday of last week as W ood. the hottest day of the year so Go far, according to James Ivie, LICENSES weather observer. Friday's A special practice of the Logaa maximum temperature was 95 while the Saturday and Sunday high school band will be conRENEWED MUST maximums were 92 and 93. ducted tonight at 7 oclock in the respectively, Ivie said. Nibley Hall, according to A. T. The Cache. Scandinavian no in increase the Valley Henson, director. Although Good Fellows maximum held their Director Henson Society By order of the Cache county temperature is apannounced board of commissioners monthly meeting and social on Monday that the band would likeSheriff parent, a sharp rise is noted in the minimum figures. FriJeff Stoell is visiting each of five Thursday evening at the Rich- ly be in Ogdeu for a portion of mond tabernacle social hall. In- the Pioneer Days celebration licensed tap-bevendors throughdays minimum was 54, the July out the county. Licenses will run same as strumental music was furnished on 21, 22. 23, 24 and 25. while Saturday, the violin and piano by Mrs. out July 18 and must be renewed Sundays climbed to 60 and Monday the minimum read 65. Langton Chambers of Smithfield through the state liquor commission before continued and the E. M. Hicken family. Vo- -' Friday's maximum was just operation five under wi!' be allowed. cal and instrumental music was the hottest degrees of 1934 when on July 28 the Under the state liquor law five given by Fred Clark and daughter. draft beer licenses are allowed for thermometer reached 100. On Iris. A character dialogue was giv29 last Cache county under its present the en by the Misses Afton Sorensen year July mercury Nobody should drive a car hit 99. Of the five licensed and Ruth Bair. population who is not capable of giving The maximum for July 12 houses asking for renewal only lunchthe his whole time and attention Following program, last year was 95 and minimum one has been contested. Petitions eon was served and the remainder to the job of driving. Look was 60. On July 13 the readhave been entered in several difof the tvening spent In dancing. ahead on each side as well as ferent forms against the River ings were 91 and 60, on July Dance music was played by Mrs. in front, and always be prepar14 it was 97 and 62 and on tbe Club, south of the Logan river Adonia Traveller and Ernest Jened for the unexpected. Youll 93 65. on and 15th, the state highway. bridge sen of Mink Creek. be ready If It does happen. 1 POET PLAY RESURFACE WORK post-offi- FOR s YOUTH PROVO FUNERAL KANSAS CITY, Mo July 15 (L'.I'I You could have heard e. pin drop as Mrs. H. S. Holliday got up to speak. You could have heard a pin drop at any time during her speech for Mr3. Holliday was addressing 2,000 deaf persons in sign language. None of the noisy hilarity associated with conventions was in evidence today as members of the National Fraternal Society of the Deaf attended opening sessions of their annual meeting. There was no babel of voices, no exclamations of approval or disapproval as the speakers drove home their points with an animated gesture, no shouted exchange , greetings in the lobby. Instead, there was hundreds of smiling faces and the rapid gesticulation of articulate hands. The only sounds were the shuffle of feet and slap of palms striking of palms. Mrs. Holliday was the interpreter for the municipal and civic club officials whose speeches of welcome she delivered. Some of the delegates conversed but most by means of of them used the simpler sign language. One young man, a delea from southern state, used gate neither medium virrying on a conversation with a prolonged young woman delegate. His facial expressions alone appeared to convey his meaning perfectly. The young women seemed not to mind his southern accent. Arthur L. Roberts of Chicago, grand president, was to make the chief address of the day. A reception will be held toeight in a Kansas City hotel. ce world-fame- nt MEETING OF DEAF Many Dairymen Expected at Annual Meet COVE OPERA FOR RESIDENT Friday Is Still Hottest 935 Day BEER BE Scandinavians Meet At Richmond Hall Logan High School Band To To Ogden er Traffic Talks |