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Show $- DECEMBER WHEAT 51.17 511.5 $1.17 High Low Close - T7 13 34 18 THE WEATHER UTAH fid VOLUME LL LOGAN, CACHE COUNTY. UTAH, THURSDAY, OCTOBER ELECT M'NUIT AS NATIONAL Miami, Florida Was Ad- POSSIBLE PAUL V. ROUTE OF' TRANS-ATLANTI- 11, 1928. DIRIGIBLE C $ GEM COBNDER German dirigible Graf Ztpptlln en ita tranaatlantic croiaing from Friedrlchahafen to Lakehurat, may follow tha court tha Lot Angela took In 1924, In preference to the ahorter northern routa acroea England, Ireland and Ntwfoundland. Lot Angeles left Frledrichehafen (1) at 5:35 a. m Oct. 12, 1924, and patted the point marked, a follow: (2) 6:30 p. m, Oct. 12; (3) 11:40 a. m, Oct. 13; (4) 3:20 p. m, Oct. 13, and (5) 1:15 a. m, Oct. 15, (6) arriving at Lakehurat at 9:52 a. m, Oct. 15, N. J, d4j 3 3 3 jjj asm riEfT'FOR Blf SOU THE UN Mary Ambrose Smith was crowned queen of love and beauty at the annual Veiled Prophet festival in St. Louis. Walsh Praised Smith And King In Ogden Speech Passes 9th Birthday England. Oct. 11 (AP) British civ.l aviation has celebrated the completion of its ninth year of operation between London and the continent. When on August 25, 1919, the world's first daily airplane service for passengers was instituted between London and Paris the ft were small maclunes of 360 horsepower, each seating two passengers in a tiny cabin. Croydon, ait-cra- San Pedro, Calif . Oct. 11 By D. Harold Oliver with the setting sun (Associated Press Staff Writer) a giant whaler last night slipped Train En Governor Smiths Nations Treasury through harbor channel lined with Route to North Carolina, Oct. 11 Ogden, Oct. 11 (P) United cheering crowds and madly whistlto the stolid cralt to bear a modem Jason (p) The gateway States Senator Thomas J. Walsh ing on a voyage of which the Golden south was opened wide for Govof Montana charged the Fleece is the solution of mysteries ernor Smith today and the old of with the icy waters at the bottom of dominion was the first to shout publican party corruption welcome. and greed and praised Alfred the earth. Commander Richard E. Byrd Off on a flying meeting and E. Smith as the defender of the and members of his exped.uon greeting campaign of two days in rights pf the common people in on the broad deck of the NorweNorth Carolina, Tennesa campaign address here to- gian vessel, the C. A. Larsen, with Virginia, see and a small strip of northern faces alight with the reflection of day. Alabama, the Democratic nominee The Montana senator referred that uproarious farewell and the crossed the Potomac shortly after with which they long eagerness ,to Senator William II. King of had looked forward to the moment daybreak this morning and was hailed by tha first large southern in of departure for the antarctic. Utah, who seeks of the channel group of enthusiasts at Fredere the November election, as the From toot of tugs and the icksburg. Va., avaout 8:30. The came piotector of the nations treas- blast ofthemerchantmen and even governor, however, - was .still In taxaa foe of and ury unjust the shrill whistle of passing street bed In his private car and had to tion; God be content with cars, sending forth their listening from the After the excellent record speed to the explorers, and fre- inside to the shouts from the a the back whaler gave Senator King has made it would quently answer. crowd. booming be a calamity if he were not Senator Glass, of Virginia, a as of Byrd and The last one of the first guests to board returned to the senate, Walsh members of minutes his party on American said. He is a foe of monopoly soil had been given over to official the special train, getting on , at an dpower in the hands of the farewells, to newspaper inter- Washington at dawn with a few for newspapermen to add to the 35 views, posing for pictures, wealthy few. He is a terror to motion picture and news cameras writers already on the train. all who look with covetous and even a few minutes for talkContinued on page tour eyes upon the treasury of the ing movies. United States. Fie has striven Modern communication methods to see that unjust taxation is made It ' possible for Commander talks with removed and the burden be Byrd to haveMrs.farewell his mother, R. E- Byrd, in distributed so that Winchester. equally Va., and his brother. (API-West- ward Ite-cor- ps the-sid-es " - - Continued from rtnea Two, STORMY AND FREEZING WEATHER REPORTED FROM UTAH A Its Way in Storm Had To Return to Salt Airplane Lost Lake An Ogden, Utah, Oct. (A?) inch of heavy snow weighed down trees and shrubs in Ogden this morning and m some cases caused branches to be broken. There was a short power interruption caused "by the breaking of lines Five inches of snow was reported in Huntsville In the upper Ogdel river valley. Ogdenites who stepped out doors at 7 a. m. to view their flattened gardens watched for more than half an hour the gyrations or an airplane that seemingly was lost in the murky clouds. it Later was learned that the pilot of a Boeing plane bound from Salt Lake to Cheyene had tried in vain to find its way over the mountains and had to return to Salt Lake. 11 Governor Harry Byrd at RichThe telephone commond, Va. pany had brought a special line aboard ship to make this possible. Wife Accompanied Byrd To Docks As the boat threw off its lines, it slipped away from the dock A without the commander. moment previously he had stepped ashore for another farewell word with his wife. She had accomhim to the dock an hour panied To Know before and waited in an autoChina Wants until he had boarded the How To Build Roads mobile Then she slipped aboard ship. unnoticed by the army of cameraGreater men who had been striving to Canton Oct. 11 (AP) enthusiasm' for good roads and snap a picture of the couple tomotor car transportation of all gether. Smilingly she refused to pose. kinds in Canton and throughout The last leavetaking was a South China has been created by simple handclasp, an exchange of a visit of a representative of the steady looks and a few words. American Nat ional Automobile Then each turned to their Jobs Chamber of Commerce, Walton Byrd's two or even three years of in the blank spaces of the filling Schmidt of New York., and his wifes the keeping map,Coining to Canton with detailed of their home for his return. information of all kinds on road A speed boat was pressed into building, motor car manufacturer service by Commander to and operation, Mr. Schmidt soon overtake the big whaler Byrd and he drew the attent.on of government was hauled to (the deck ' over the officials as well as private indivi- stern which hung low in the water duals. with the boat's 10.000 ton cargo. Numerous Chinese engineers edIn the outer harbor the whaler ucated in America, now engaged in stopped to pick up a couple sling in South loads of explosives which had highway construction China, were eager for information parked on a barge when she had in entered the port. of the latest development Then turning United States road building. Theout to sea she was on her way to realso South China government quested information. - Strategy of Keeping Clear of Personalities And Controversies In His $peeches Has Been This Is Carried Out Unusual. French Dis-mari- lniSy v - ne Snow, Snow! yes. early as it Is in the season, we have an abundance of it for the first offering Whether it is the beautiful snow so enthusiast, ically welcomed by the poet, or otherwise, depends largely upon' the individual view point, or the manner in which it may affect ones personal Interests. Just how much of it there will be will have to await its cessation to ascertain. This morning, ac cording to oficial report, eight and a half inches had fallen on the U. A. C. farm in Greenville, carrying the unusual water content of .55 inches of water.- - Unofficial reports from some other sections indicated several inches more. It has continued falling and adding to the precipitation during the greater part of the day; but melting practically as fast as it fell. Damage Done The breaking of overweighted limbs of trees overhanging telephone and electric wires, caused a great deal of damage. More than a hundred telephones on the local system were out of commission. Trouble on the Utah Power and Light Cos, system reached from here to Montpelier; but service In the Logan business district sufferThe Logan City ed but little. electric service received numerous calls, and the trouble men .of all three organizations are and will be busy for some time connecting up the service. Inquiries into damage to the fruit crop from such quarters as could be reached In North Logan, River Heights and Providence, Indicate that while many overweighted limbs were broken off and some trees split, the damage was not so extensive as might have been expected, and unless the snow is followed by heavy frost, the damage will not be excessive. All throughout the city sidewalk pavements were strewn with limbs broken from the shade trees, and the same condition prevailed on By James L. West (Associated Press Staff Writer) 11 Oct. Washington, (P) While Herbert Hoover engages in Continued on page two no political prophesies, he has formed his friends that he Is sat lsfied not, only with the general ,Too Many People outlook over the country, but also Enjoy Bad with the manner in which the bick-nc- ss Chicago, Oct. ftl (AP) major strategy of his own camand sympathy was the subpaign Is working out. of Dr. Herman N. Bundesen's This strategy has been to con- ject before the Steuben club. remarks to discussion a fine his addresses Dr. Budesen Is president of the of the issues and his own philoso- American public health associaphy of government and to keep tion. clear of personalities and conDont sent them flowers, when troversies which might obscure its censure that they need, he what he regards as the fundamen- saidToo many enjoy bad tal principles in which the public health. It amounts almost to a Is primarily interested. conspiracy to poularize sickness. That plan was followed in his When anyone"hfIs ill. he has nature and dosent some? law campaign, and he deserve much less sympathy, it his to has adhered rigidly since flowers. at times Salt Lake City, Oct. 11 (AP-c- old drizzling rain was falling here today following a flurry of snow ir the early morning hours. The snow melted soon after it fell. J. Cecil Alter, government wea-fhe- r Submarine expert said that the .22 of an Two Days Overdue inch of rain which fcP nomination, although would furnish some reliefIast.jiight to farm there has been po small amount rops and liveiXock ranges, Paris, Oct. ll OP) Search was of pressure put upon him to desubFrench for the freezing teirneratures Oct. 11 Moscow predicted (JP) tor tonight, however, wdl cause begun today Ondine two days overdue (patches from Kabul, Afgtianist- - part from It In speciffic instances. 'ome damage to tomato vines, he at Aside from his public addressBizarta, the fortified seaport said. es, he has made few statements . of Tunis. for publication and only one of The submarine was pn an enBoise.- - Oct. 11 these has dealt with claims of A light (AP from Cherbourg rnst sweot oveh the Boise valley durance run jjoscow whereunder the re- - the opposition. This was his statef jr-- r I. i? prg- right rml ministries were raised ment that the Kellogg-Brian- d of mrtae white for tonight by the United The ambassadorial treaty constituted the greatest to rank weal he bureau here. expressing the belief that absence Soviet envoy italic was re- contribution to world peace and ndv weather minimi?, oH the of news was explainable by a tfect of the frost lest rivht but breakdown of the wireless, order- - Jceived m private audience by was a complete answer to the charge of the Democrats that the forecast for tonight ed navel, ve.ssels and airphnpsKing Amanullah and presented 1 credential jic-hj. tn (Contin,id on 'i.U t,; ill- C) (- tower in New York. is driven by five Reversible engines with 550 horsepower each. Its fuel is blue gas." It cost about $1,000,000 and is oh ned by the German people, the money being raised largely through popular subscription. Its maximum sliced is more Ilian 80 miles an hour. It left Friedriehshafen, Germany, at 2 oclock New York time today, and should reach its destination, Lakehurst, N. J, Sunday morning. It carries 20 passengers and a erew of 40. . t It carries the 'first non ten pasT senger in a flight hi a dirigible, Grace Drummond flay, English society woman. It Crowd At Fredericks- Telephone, Electric and Harold Horan burg Gave Demon- All Wire Service Disstration While Gover- turbed Fruit And Expelled From in Bed nor Was Still Shade Tree Damage-Compens- ating BeneIkv Appeared On PlatPress Association form At Ashland. fits. Commander Spent Last Minutes, Before Boarding Ship In Giving Official Farewells and I nt e JSTewspaper , Airline s STATES T Health - h Five Burned To Death In England . Shaftesbury, England, Oct. 11 (p) Three men, a woman and a child, all unidentified, were bum7 ed to death in an overturned automobile on a lonely road near here during the night. Apparently the car in overturning had pinned its occupants beneath it and burst into flames. The disaster was only (ji.scovrrcd when the fire was Left Paris Last Night By Automobile For Belgium On Way To England Paris. Oct. 11 (AP) . Harold Horan, correspondent of the New York American, who was requested to leave France by the French authorities because of his connection with the publication of a memorandum French diplomatic naVal accord, on the Anglo-Frenc- h was expelled from membership In Press Associthe ation today by a committee which investigated the case. The association previously had requested the French authorities to postpone Horan's expulsion until the matter could be threshed out. The reason given by the committee for expelling him from the Press Association was that he was "on various counts guilty of unprofessional conduct. Horan left Paris by automobile last night for England by way of Belgtnm. Brussels dispatches said that he had arrived there today and called at the American embassy. Horan explained in conversation from Belgium with a friend in Paris that he left France before midnight Wednesday because he had been informed originally that he must depart by Thursday. Anglo-Americ- Route to Avoid Storm. h traiLs-Allant- ir The Montana Senator Declared King To Be Protector of j can Navy. If stood on end. it would reach within 22 feet of the 792 foot Wool-wort- , London-Pari- THE UNITED - ington, Ind., today was elected commander of the national American Legion. McNutts selection came on the third ballot after Captain John D. Ewing, Shreveport, La., leader up to that time, withdrew in the Indiana Legionnaires favor. On motion Horn the floor after it became apparent that McNutt had received a majority of the votes his election was made unanimous. The successful the law . candidate is dean of school at the University' of In- diana. He holds degrees from the University of Indiana and Harvard. McNutt is 37 years old. He served in the field artillery during the world war attaining . PROCEEDING Giant Passenger AirGraf Zeppelin Friedrich-shafe- n High Lights ship, Left Two at a. m. (By The Associated Press) It Is the greatest altera ft in the (Eastern Standard world t- 114 feet longer than the Los Angeles, pride of the AmeriTime) Took Southern San Antonio, Tex., Oct. 11 (p)Paul V. McNutt, Bloom- , ZEPPELIN TOWARD . president of the reserve officers association of the United States being a colonel in the reserve. San Antonio, Tex., Oct. 11 For the second successive (vP) year Miami, Florida todqy was adjudged to have the best Amer- ican Legion drum and bugle in the finals of the con-- j test at the national American Legion convention here. Fifteen survivors took part in todays finals. Salem, Oregon., was second, Frankford post of Philadelphia third .and. South fourth. Pasadena, ' California, The Miami corps placed first at the convention ' at Paris last year. Ogden, Utah, placed fifth and Pierre, S. D., sixth. Snow and colder NUMBER 211. Queen Of Beauty; judged to Have The Best American Legion Drum and Bugle Corps Ogden Corps Given Fifth Place. : tonight; freezing temperature; Friday mostly fair. an Barcelona, Spain, Oct. 11 (AP) The German dirigible Graf Zep-peh- n, en route to the United States, passed over this city at 6:50 p. m. , (By The Associated Press) The drone of powerful motors over Southern Europe today marked the path of the giant German passenger dirigible Graf Zeppelin which set out from Friedriclisha- -' fen at 8 oclock this' morning (2 a. m. eastern standard time) lor Lakehurst N. J. Warned off the northern route by stormy weather, the Graf Zeppelin turned southward and at length pointed her nose toward the Atlantic following the southern route by way of the Azores. It meant a detour of about 500 miles, but Dr. Hugo Eckner, in whose hands lies the safety of twenty passengers and a crew of forty, was taking no unecessary chances with the weather. Even over the southern Europe districts- there wasmn-ant- lmis and the visibility was had. disappointing thousands of Frenchmen eager to see the first German dirigible to pass over French terrl- tory since the end of Iht world wai. From the moment that the Hugh ship slid from her hangar at Friedrichafen in a dull mist this morning, she droned steadily at an average speed of from 55 to 60 miles an hour. At 3:33 E. S. T., the ship passed over Baisie, Switzerland, and an hour and a half later she crossed the border, sailed over Belfort, heading smiuiwes;, she sped over the city of Lyons and then turned directly to the south, sailing down the Rhone'val-le- y to the Mediterranean. Monteli-mou-wa- rd Franco-Germa- n ar waspassed at T.r and Arles shortly after. Her lest was over the touch with France Rhone Delta at the wireless sta9:05 fi. S, In Balntes Maries Delamar. tion Barcelona Spain, or the Balearic Islands were the next points in her path with the likelihood that she would pass over Gibraltar nt entrance to the Mediterranean and would then head for me Azores. It was not expeelecLytt the ship would reach the Uhvettr States before Sunday morning. Bigger and, mightier than tmy airship that attempted the flight, (.the dirigible Zeppelin adds a new chapter travel bv air, as the ZR 3, now the U. S, dirigible Los Angeles, .did trana-Atlant- long-distan- ce (Continued ic Graf to a Just navy four on Page Three) COLUMBIA CRASHED MONOPLANE ON ATTEMPT TAKEOEF FOR ROME Both Hot and Cold Weather Reported Pilot And Navigator Escapid Seemed Without Injury-Lo- ad Too Heavy Roosevelt Field, N. Y., Oct. 11 Chicago, Oct. 11 (AP) January and June temperatures made n (AP) The plane of the weathermap Columbia crashed on the Wesbury. crazy-qui- lt golf course today, a few minutes yesterday. There was snow and ' cold In after taking the air on its proflight to Rome. Montana and Nevada, and summer jected Both Rofeer Q. Williams, the torridity and hot dust stofms in pilot, and Pietro Bonelli, the naviTher- gator, escaped Minnesota and Nebraska. without any inOne wheel of the plane mometer readings In Mohtana jury. showed the temperature at the and at least on wing stut were broken and the ship suffered genwhile Lincoln, eral strains. freezing point, 91 iand recorded Nebr., degrees It tipped up on one wing point Minneapolis 90. but idid not turn over. Contrasting predictions of heat, The Columbia took, off at 11:55 cold and storms were made for a m., with great difficulty because of the excessive weight of its fuel today in the middle west, Decid- load, it did get into the air, howedly cooler was the warning for ever, but was unable to gain altiterritory which yesterday swelter- tude. sun. In ed under a It struggled low over the space Chicago where the reading reach- between Roosevelt and Curtis ed 82 yesterday, predictions of continued warm for tody carried felds where Rene Foncks plane two years ago. the added word of much cooler craved and burned to settle steadily and then began Friday. ' to earth. a possible upset with Fearing Balkan Moslems Buy resulting fire Bonelli kicked the valve to lighten the ship Worlds Old Clothes dump but it had just been repaired for a leak and would not work. The Williams made a forced landing Belgrade, Oct. 11, (P) Curtiss golf links Moslem population of Macedonia of theclose beside a sand trap and field, furbishes one of the worlds hemmed in by bunkers. best markets for second-han- d The plane plunged and rolled on clothing. Jugoslavia imports an- the soft turf and wheel snapped i nually old clothes enough to cov- off. on Columbia The ground looped er a population of 750, 000. per the broken wheel and tripped sons. crazily but come to a stop without France and Germany have overturning. Williams and Bonelli climbed ragged captured this great b ac clothes market and their an out of the cockpit unharmed disappointed. A cursory innual shipments totaf- .approxi- sadly spection of the plane left Imre . n pe ot another ts)- otf td-o- . mately $5 fino om ' trans-Atlam- ic adjo-nin- , j-- ' - g . . |