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Show The Weather u UTAH Iri ttl tomji! with piohihli c(lnv'l( hw h Litth tn north portion ui.( in tempt rUun ! Volume 27. Nurnlu i 1 An I ml iumJent ewM tp r !u Herald. le U LOGAN, 1 11 All, I. s INI, It A Grain 2. I 'I ui I. i I liink' bo Iuce Five Cents. fa CTT3 ! n I sop 'mmtk' Lions Dignitaries Organized y e. -- Labor Hits GETS BACK esses S' Fl t At Convention Denial Ol Minimum W.iup Kitthls K I out lh I How Ikii I -- i Playboy Cop.to-maReported To n llv i Be Overworked lif IOIIN rul'd r , iff Si l 1IM nr r ondi id WASHING () lull' 2 II 0 g un( d ihur ihc ire i ourts to I rlt m rl nf Miprc mi titr's lights to frs minimum w mil ii" and hornsi fir women li w luldri n ci an m He m mil on tun lip t ion il ( 'on mu mime nl g c in 1 I l Z1011-ihec- k 1 MERRY I GO-ROUN- D Plctur of What' Going On in National Affairs A Dally By DREW PEARSON and ROBERT S. ALLEN W ASHINGTON -- Chcsti r Davis cigarette-mnkindiminutive, nervously the Administrator of 5AA, is now definitely out of the Roosevelt agricultural puture He is accepting $50 000 a Roc bin k with Sears Mar i hirf sellers of mail order Davis s to farmers goods knowledge of farm problems and his prestige with the Scars R o e b u c k farmers, Ihinks, is worth that salary Behind all this is one 0f the most paradoxical hidden in the New Deal. Chester Davis, when he joined the AAA, was not an imposing figure He was an assistant to George Peek, then chief adming istrator But General William I Wes- offirr soon ropped up as the real exei utive He pietty much rtn Peek and the whole show Davis was very s nnu h on the tern'll, ex-ar- side-line- LIBERAL AID About that time, Jerome Frank AAA legal counsel, Gardner Jack-so- n of the Consumers Division, and other liberals, put their heads together to help Davis They felt that General Westervelt was easing him completely out of the pH tuic But soon Westervelt joined Peck Roebuck, George little and Chester signed, Davis proved eapahle of taking aip of himself He stepped up and up, finally became No. 1 man in the AAA And the minute h stepped into leal power, Chester fired Jerome and Frank, Gardner Jai k.son other liberals who had once tried to help him This purge of the AAA was the first incident to ge't Chester Davis in wrong with Secretary of Agriculture Wallace W allace close to remarked friends at the time. 'Davis and Tugwell don't mix They can t get along together permanently All I want to do is to keep them both working long together nough to tide things over " Reus re MEAT PACKERS FRIEND The end of that period ame list winter upon passage of the new AAA hill After that, Wa'laee went to the White House and asked for Chester Davis s scalp He argued that Davis was too close to the meat psekirs flour (( oniniieij on riyr A m ijority of nearly for adjustment on loo assess- ed With hundreds of delegates and members present from GO jictne dubs from Weiser, Idaho, on the north, to Mo.ih, Utah, on the south, the annual convention of the district No. 28 of Lions International today began with sessions in the Roxy theater and USAC aud.-tthe dilation of property as hy Cache property o' ers I'iu sd iy morning were idjust"d the 'o tixpayers satisfaction hy cs pow rs oc ini In la idi m of t h Aim ri m I i di i tin st de tax commission ind the of commisation of Lahoi In 'did bv W il Cache county board of the miiontv sioners, acting as a boaid linn Green sew cepiali7 ition The tax commission opinion is a basis for the r dt consisting Arnovitz Irwin of minds The mijnntv opinion w is J H P R E Hammond the fourth severe blow to ihor churman, Le itham and J William Knight from the eouit in i little more arc meeting the .ounty with th in a year board throughout the wc'k to t he The1 eourt knm Kcd out and make ad-jNRA AG hear complaints Railway Rtiiement tine nts the Guffiy Coil ('ontml Ait end the New Anile Mini Ajiproxiinately half of the tc. vesterdiv he ird and IllUlIl complaints Wage Li a All Wire sup 'posts luesdiv com erned real property, tn ported Strongly orgmiid while the other half pertained to ihiu T he i otirt old di SI personal property in i two weeks igo he Id he fe di '1 According to N J Crookston iw ( ounty the lerk, equalisation gov rnnient in the Gutfey coull not rogul ite working eon hoard will work through a definditions of miners and m t hi New ite si hedulc W'edncsd iy they York use held stelis did not will meet the requests of have the powir eithei S' Vl nteen from North Login, Hyde liws Park, Smithfield and Richmond other stales hiv sinulai directThese however, weie not The remainder of the schedule York will include Logan taxpayers on ly involved in the New case VVellsville, Mendon, Thursday; The decision brought the con- Benson, Cove and Coll' gc ward troversy over the supreme court taxpayers on Friday and LewisW hether to a new high point. ton, Trenton, Clarkston, Cornish ! the fight for i constitutional and Newton taxpayers on the folamendment would be carried into lowing Monday the coming political campaign remained uncertain Presidentu Roosevelt has given no direct IS ation he will raise the issue MISSING The minority opinion, written by Justice Hnlan Stone was reFOUND CHICAGO gal ded as of especial significance Some saw it in an implied inconstitutional a for vitation amendment Congress defining MAMARONECK, N Y, June 2 it Pi power over industry William Theile, wealthy Wall Stone intimated th.it the major- street financier, said today his Justice de. by written lsion IV year Webster William ity old Pierce Bu"er, w cs based upon Theile missing for a month, has peisonal eeonoi if predilections been found in Chicago Joining with Stoi . were Chief I talked with him telephone " Evans Hughes Theile said "He is by Justice Charles well and will Cardoso and come home soon He told me he Justice Benjamin urday has been selling magazines " W hen Theile asked the boy if he was prepaied to come home, the youth queried URGES WOMEN TQ 'If I come hack, will I have to go bar k to the Ry Country Day hool" ENTER POLITICS si 'Well talk about that when you rome home," the father replied The youth was scheduled to comJune plete his studies at the COE! JR d ALFNF Id i si hool t 2 U Il- Ihc onve n inn of the this month and he was to enter WoPinfessmmil B isiness and Hotehkiss .school m Connecticut in mens clubs of Idaho combined the fall de leg ites hung urged todiy with enter dominantly into polto ities" women he CANADIAN Polit i. s concerns cause of its fur-r- e idling influence on every phase of life," Miss Williams Chari Ormond DAMAGE president of the National Federation Professional and Business of Womens clubs said last night VANCOUVER, B C. June 2 (I li Our position is vital Lets go Swollen rivrrs which went out liout of the rumble se it of of their banks in eastern British lies " today closed more than was Columbia eh irter A perm inent 100 national miles of Canadian granted the Kellogg 8k, chapter rulway track leading to Prince whieh was organized during the Rupert past year 1 he convention openThe Skeena river, filled by melted Sund iv ing snows roared out of its batiks in the northwestern section of the province, flooding villages and disrupting communications ONE KILLED, ONE Telephone and telegraph wires are down Damage was believed as the river flows through a CRASH slight HURT rough, sparsely settled region The Fraser river, which empties into the sea near Vancouver, was FARMINGTON, June 2 U li rising The Columbia and Illecille-waOne man was killed and a deputy rivers in eastern British sheriff was injured today in two i wen out of their banks in an related aeiidents blamed h, tne highest water since 1804 Scv-- i and fog thoritics on a lamstoim ral lailway washouts were reHarold A Clements, 18 private ported Lake Salt at Fort Collins City, was killed instantly when he was struck bv an automobile as he SCANDINAVIANS Lake walked along the Ogden-SU- t highway a mile and a half south of here with two companions FRIDAY TO Woods Cross Alvin Cliverh, driver of the ear involved, was not I i Address Presented To Delegates By Third Vice President of Lions International Inspirational Schedule Is Outlined For Property Owners A WASHINGTON, Jum 2 n Rep Marion A Ziom lui ported as 'resting eomfoiiihlv .t Galhnge r hospit d got h n k his vanished bride tod u His wife, the form i Hulm Nix, paid a se, ret isit to hi r husband's bedside and the n returned to the hiding pi ti e which when Ziom hecks she sought pare finally became too mui h for her ' Though physicians iM'ir reti-(eabout the visit, Zioniherk was reported muih relieved to see his wife again Mrs Zionehei k was ncnoii'-wheshe arrived it the hospit d hut attendants said shi ipiered mu h reassured dter the visit with her husband She had no comment to make however, on any of the Zion hu k develop nients since she fhd to the refuge of a friends home list Kit day Hospital attendants said was improving under i arc The playboy congressman from Seattle, is suffering from overwork, physicians' at G illinger said today after an hospital examination At th" ward psychopathic where Zioncheik was held for mental observat on, it was said his condition was not serious ' A few days rest was prescribed, indicating he soon may be released Five months of rowdv antics in which he was jailed five times married, took a riotous honeymoon and invented a new drink -- the Zioncheek Zipptr ended m the psychopathic ward on order, from police ' d Si it, N two-da- y ,c Utah-ldah- o i i ( i i i oi mm v u I re r I r e Ointril I t ih m-d- HEIR IN e RIVERS CAUSE IN MEET While Sheriff Joseph Holbrook and Deputy W ntiart Burnett wore plaung Clements' body in an am-il bulance, a ear driven by Vern Jacques of Livton plowed into tins vehicle knoiking the parked sheriff down and sending Bennett to a hospital He vv - not believed seriouslv injured DEN A UF.IOItT FRANCISCO, June 2 U P Officials of the eountv jail, where Wirren K Billings convicted with Thomas Moonev in 1816 Dav the Preparedness bombing is being held to be available to appear as a witness during Mooneys haheis corpus hearine today denied that Bill' ings was critically ill SAN Will ird Larsen son of Mr and Mrs Niels J Larsen who returned from the Danish mission Tuesday will be the speiker in the Siandanivian meeting Friday June 5 at the stake house, at 7 30 Good music has been ar-- i inged for and everyone is invited Mr Larsen spent two years and two months in the Danish mission for the LDS church FIGHT HOFFMAN liter F l) trr of Sure nto (ilif thud ht pit m dent of the Lions Intorn itioiuil of Hyrum, gowrnor of the Utah HiM ri t Linns lubs W Nm Ison me Iowa Senator Senator King Takes Heavy Opens Battle For Tax Lead In Vote Dukinsor. tax-piye- i held llv 2 to Loads 1 r.ionkh.ut 1 la, TRENTON, N J June 2 U Pi Gov Hoffman s Harold G enemies threatened to fight reviewing the whole Lindbergh kidnaping case todav to prev. nt him H Norman from ousting Col Schwarzkopf, chief of state police since 1821, , VA d three yeais King spoke slowly in a low voice that hardly tarried to the ( rowded the galleries watching final big conflict of this session were groups of frienls 'nd foes of the comthe promise bill, including Sen Wilfacilities communication in who The liam E Borah, R, Idaho western half of the stall storm prevented farm work for intends to renew his drive against on debate the ir. the day, however and swelled bal- monopolies measure loting to an anticipated h ilf milAround him lion Republicans, as usual in Iowa, cast almost twice as m inv votes as Democrats, indu iting that mni few voters paratively (hinged their affiliations Gov Clyde L Herring swept ahead of his opposition in the e Demoe for ratio nomination rai for senator, where he was opposed by Rep Huhcrt Utterhai k Lent Gov Nils Krasi hel rolled lip a commanding load over Supreme Court Jostiie Richird Mitchell for the Dcmorruti' nomina tion for governor, Krasi hi Js'lkI and Mitchell 23 23 The race for Republican noniiiM tion for governor narrowed down to George Wilson, Des Moines and James M Grimes Dickinsons eamjiaign was the only one of national import Both Democrats and Republicans have selected delegates to the national nomm iting conventions Democrats instruct! el for Roosevelt, Republicans un nstrui There was no presidential preference ballot r, ATTEND TRIAL IN DISTRICT COURT W M Kuier, ihairnmn of the slate industrial romims.inn, and William Keller, reporter for the commission, were in Logan Tuesday They met Tuesday morning ill the courthouse to hear the case of Richard Richardson, of Smi'y field against the Amalgamated company Mr Richardson has made application to the commission for compensation for the loss of an arm, which he cl urns was lost while in the employ of the sugar comHis claim is made on an pany alleged violation of the safety rules by the sugar company. 8u-g- n Frcdrlrk Dixon of Ogden, was instrui tor music visa among the ni inv ors to attend the Sunset Festival whieh was presented to the public bv the music department of the USAC under the dueilioti of Professors Walter Welti and N V C'hristiansi n Mr Dixon in commenting on the Oiatorio Elijah' which was the main featuie of the festival said, I w int to congratulate you upon the fine presentation of Elijah and cspeiiillv the most exrcllent work of the t horus, whuh showed the fine tr lining you have given There was a fine .shading them fioin pianissimo to a full forte diffie ult to ae hieve in young most ' well-know- n Miking i 17 hour dine tmm Hollywood to I.ogan Kvrrnel Huk-mi, ind f irmly visited with E parents Professor and Mis Hickman over the weekend Tlicv left Sunday night for Hollvwnod Mr Hickman is the head of a sales company in refrigeration southern California, according m Professor Hu knnn Mrs Hickman was formerlv Miss Ruth Bennett of Login Their daughter is named Kyrme Ruth A Hickman family reunion w is observed Sunday when the i hil dren of Professor and Mrs link m in gathered at the family hone Ihes-besides the Cilifoimi guests were Leon Hiokm in mini ger of the Intermountmi Knitting , company of Ogden, Rodino offiro manager of the Spcnv Mills of Ogden, Othello Hukmin life insurance rejiresentativ e of Logan Voiko Hu kman sup of the Caehe county machine shop and Mrs Marva linkman H instn of Piradise n hi-- 1 Hua-man- J VII. l'lillFKIilll LOS ANGFLES. June 2 'll ' Dr Fiances E Townsend, foundtr of the old age revolving Pension plan, may go to jail to show his defiance of the Bell investigating committee Sheridan Downev, his counsel, declared here today. FARMINGTON Utah, June 2 Pi Mrs Julia Boyer, 32, related in court today a long series of erratic incidents which defense prove attorneys claim Paschal Boyer, condemned slayer, is insane and should not be executed for slaying four persons last Oc tober 13 Mrs Boyer, formerly of Wayne, Oklahoma, told the court that her husband one attempted suicide, that he attacked her, that he was stricken with scarlet fever in Cheyenne, NVyo and that he suffered severe headaches which necessitated his taking as many as eight aspirin tablets a day Mrs Boyer's testimony opened the second day of Boyers trial in wnich he seeks to escape death on a pla of not guilty by reason of insinity to a charge of slaying Mrs Blanche Nelson, Woods Ci oss widow, last year In an attempt to do away with witnesses to his crime, the state charges, he also killed three other persons The same jury, 12 men, who eonvii ted the forme r meat buyer at his original trial, sat in the courtroom Mrs Boyer also followed up yesterday testimony submitted Dr by Bryant R. Simpson of San Dmgo, Calif, who told cf examining the defendant in 1934 and finding him insane She said on one occasion Boyer attacked and bit her then could not recall the incident laur She bIbo told how he once severe blow on the a suffered head which left a three inch wound. M FORESTERS BAIT v on es R. B. WEST STILL CRITICALLY ILL Billing nf all nation il forest areas in the see tion foi ground .squirrels opened Frid iv morning under the direction of Forest SuThe pervisor Carl B Arentson work will complete the halting of exthe ind all in the area with ec pi ion of several infested firm are is Counlv Agent R I, Wngliv urges that farmers hut the md as the inasmiu h immediately, squirrels are nt top season for baiting With the i nopi i ition of all produieis in the county, till pest can he prartually climinitcd tins year, he said ROSS TO ATTEND Many more registrations are ted late today and early tomorrow, Lloyd Theurer, secretary of the Utah-ldah- o district, says ex-p- Boise is very much present convention The men folks wear wide streamers around their hats and the women folks have the same kind of streamers pinned to their coats, announcing, 'Boise " at the in 1937 Dr J W Williams of Moab, Utah, is the oldest Lion at the convention Although 82 years of age, he enjoys the fun of the convention as much as Platt Clark, the Hyrum Lion tamer Dr Williams who came to Moab 39 years ago, is one of four of the 37 Moab Lions at the convention President Walter Dexter of Sacramento, Cal , who represents the Lions International at the convention, accused James Clovi superintendent of the Murray city schools, of wanting to show how small in stature Dexter is Clove, who is almost a replica of Professor Harrison R Merrill, was trying to get some easy California money from the visiting I ions official, who is built on the plan of President Joseph E Cardon Governor C Ben Ross will he a visitor at the twenty sixth annual Idaho Pioneer celebration to he held at Franklin Monday, June to S R Handv, committee Also it is expected that one of the general authorities of the chairman of the publit lty church will be in attend into as speaker he said the afternoon a double-heade- r In baseball program has been arranged between Franklin and Richmond and between Fianklm and Preston. A dance Is scheduled to commence at 12 01 Monday morning LDS home-makin- g, c Utah-ldah- Lion-hearte- d Murray was getting a little free advertising when Clove appeared on the stage and began extracting fines from the assembled dignitaries for real and fancied infractions He instilled some pep in the convention. ed VISITING LION HAS COLORFUL CAREER Waller F Dexter, third of the Lions Internation il who is the mam figure of the Lions convention of the distrut, now in progress in Logan, is one of the leidmg edueatois of the wi st Born in Chicago, Illinois, Mr Dexter moved to Iowa when seven years of age He lived there and in Missouri 83 He graduated from a ho Finn college in Iowa, received Cos from his master degree lumbia and later his doctor of hilosojihy in education from II irvard He lectured on educational matters at tho University of and then became Virginia, head of the educational department of the Earlham collego In 1823 he in Richmond Ind became president of the Whittier college at Whittier, Calif, where he remained for 11 nt Utah-ldah- How can society make progress without stifling the individual and it makes the greatest stifles him progress whn it least Hov can the individual succeed without disrupting the social order? and he succeeds best when he disrupts it least President Dexter declared that Liomsm attempts to answer these questions, first, by placing a proper value upon individual personality, second, by establishing and preserving high ideals, and third by giving unselfish vice He emphasized that the value of an individual is He stressed" the imporwithtu.' citizentance of ship, preparation for a vocation, and the right use of leisure time. He praised Utah for the opportunities given her young people to learn a vocation. The convention began at 10 45 o'clock when Val Palmer, presi-dof the Logan Lions club called the convention to order and turned the gavel over to Cantril Nielsen of Hyrum, d'strict governor of Utah, who introduced visiting dignitaries from the Lions district A letter of greeting was read from tho Telegrams Logan Rotary club. were received from Melvin Jones secretary of the International organization, the International conthe Tulsa, vention committee, Oklahoma club which is seeking 1937 the international convention, and from the Mt. Pleasant, Utah club. The Invocation was offered by President J. W. Funk of Richmond. A flag ceremony was presented by Boy Scouts from Logan First of direction ward under the George Bullen with Don Bateson reading an ode to the flag. exMayor A. G Lundstrom tended the welcome of Logan to the convention He was introduced by Lloyd Theurer, who referred to him as Logans mayor. A response was given by Gilbert Stanton of Caldwell, Idaho, past district governor. Flattering sentiments to Cache Valley, its beauty and its progressive citizenry was paid hy Leo Hansen of Lehl, past district governor, who gave the keynote address at the opening session Mr Hansen recalled that while district governor he had chattered three of the present Cache Valley clubs. The success of the convention, said Mr Hansen, depended or the attitude of the delegates H (Continued on Page Eight) nt I o I IDAHO DAY FETE 15, according Bishop Ilav B West's condition is ri'imile' ns s.ill unchanged Bishop West, dean of the school of engineering at the I s C, and director of the state planning board is in the Budge hospital suffering from pneumonia and heart trouble. The latest report from the hospital sanl that he wns about tJio same. More than 240 roaring Lions had registered at the convention at one ocloe k this afternoon Eugene Yeates, Logan postmaster, secretary of the Logan Lions club and chairman of the registration committee, has been kept busy all morning with a bevy of beautiful girls registering the Lions rnuch-need- LAND FOR PESTS ELIJAH ORATORIO HOLDS REUNION Relates Seiies of Incidents Indicating Insanity of PRAISES WORK IN HICKMAN FAMILY m- is an organization primarily terested in human progress, said President Dexter This being true we are confronted by the on how to judge question " While The Lions Slajcr IN Brookhut Returns from 1 358 of the st ite s 2 442 precincts gave Dickinson (12,121 Brook hart 31,7r)8 Returns w . e delayed hy i wind and rain storm wnkh blew out Maho distrut Testifies At Bill Sanity Trial Roar Pi lime 2 ASHINGTON, Sen William H King D, Utah opened the sen ite battle tonay for a $820 000 000 compromise coi potation and in"ome tax bill to the New Deals in pioference refoi m levy or undividad ..porale profits Arising at his front row seat as debate on the tax bill opined, I tah Senthe tall, silver-haireator ronteneled that the commeasure would meet promise President Roosevelts request for $020 000 000 permanent and $517,-00- 0 000 ill temporary revenue lum J 11 United Stales Senelor I. J Da new dial firm bitter foe of policies and mentioned as a Rel candid ite, publican presidenti appeared to have won renomina-tio- n today Dickinson based his campaign on his opposition to the new deal He was the particular taiget of Demooats urging retention of mw deal farm 'icics Intomplei returns from yesterdays primal ics gave Dickinson lead over his closalmost a est rival, Former Sen Smith W DKS MOINES, .Sumner Pond of Grace, governor of the Id iho Lions (lulls W alter F. Dexter, executive secretary of Governor Frank F. Merriam of California and third vice president of Lions International, gae the principal address of the first da when he spoke on the question, On What Standard Shall We Judge Liomsm. "The International association Boyer s Wife Ol lei s ( 'ompiiirnise 'la Hill In Piefemiee To "Uefoim In 1'iim.nv Poll -- -- iil L Jl Sixty Clubs Repr eseted a, Decision nan ,0. Range jears In 1934 he became executive) secretary of Governor Frank F Merriam of California, which position he still holds. His home et present Is in Calif Bv virtue of his being the of the orthird ganization, Mr Dexter will no doubt be elected president of Lions International m 1938. to CHOSEN BY LIONS Chairmen for the various convention committees of the Lions by gathering have been appointed Nu lsen and Governors Cantril Sumner Pond as follows; Credentials Hans P. Andetson of Hvrum International Convention J. Vv, Thornton of Provo of Major Activities D A Skeen Salt Lake Cltv of Green Lions Education G B Tremonton Inter Club Relation. John M. Frue Jr. Nampa, Idaho. of Ltr- F.. Smith Necrology-- C. lRResotutions Gilbert Stanton of Caldwell. Idaho Nominations F. M Bislelme of Pocatello - J.. Constitution and fa. laws Moms Godfrey cf KJ Othello ltk k- Sergeant-at-arm- s man of Logan Prizes Leo Hansen of Lehl AlSight Conservation Murray len of Salt Lake City. 1 Hi |