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Show UTAH AGGIES PLAY BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS WHILE ALL FOUR OF THE HIGH SCHOOL TEAMS IN THE VALLEY SEE ACTION FOR THE FIRST TIME. Whats the Score: r Phone 50 or 51 If You The Home Do Not Keren e Tout Daily Herald Volume 22. Number With uhich b 2 :CaU 50 LOGAN, UTAH, DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, is Newspaper combined The Cache Talley Daily Herald JANUARY 2 9, 1 9 31. Price 5 Cents Ml SLAYER OF Today II By Arthur Brisbane (Copyright 1930) jtnjv-i-i-i',- 6 Personality Is Better Than It, Says Daisy FAMILY S LYNCHED IfJiy Not Hunt Gold. Is The Rest Sileme. One Kaisers Life. Free. Nouhere To Go. HODGE, Mojave Desert, Calif., 27. The world needs more gold, and may get it. France and the control Fncle Sam now world'q supply, France with the highest per capita gold reserve. Hard times have sent prospectors back to hills and mountains, their "good times easy jobs in cities You see more having vanished. and more of them traveling this desert country, each, in his years of prospecting, probably passing great fortunes a dozen times. To prospect is one thing, to find is Boy Killer Pleads For Safety Of Hi3 Father. Jaa. another. rides Usually the prospector one donkey, two others following. One donkey carries the camping outfit, with blankets and grub, other carries prospectors the tools and more food. Perhaps a few sticks of dynamite are carried by the more enterprising. too An occasional prospector, old to ride long hours, drives two donkeys hitched to a two wheel cart, a pole between them, up hills and mountains too rough for his cart, he rides one donkey, leaving the other below'. These men often spend a life time without reward. More money has been put into gold mines and gold hunting than has ever been taken out. But even the oldest prospector never looks discourHope is back of the sun aged. burned face and gray beard, and fortune is always just ahead. You need not feel sorry for him. Trying is the only thing in life worth while, possession is nothing. And ho is trying, and full A young gentleman of hope. spending bis dead father's money in a fahionable gambling house might well emy the old prospector set king grub stake" for just one more trip. The Sh went through the etack of paper and held up a bulky envelope, "Here is a woman who wants me to give my opinion of it and toll her what can be done with daughters who seem to be Jetting thu best of gay life get them," she suld. "I am writing her that a LOS ANGELES, Jan. 29 Daisy De Voe, who had had two years in whicl to study closely the mysterious It possessed by Clara Bow. feels that a girl is both lucky a..J unlucky if she ha-- s it. The screen s t a r 's former secretary made such a declaration today as she read her fan mall In the county Juil. where she has been held since last Friday when she was found guilty of grand received has She theft. enough letters to keep her occupied until next Monday when her attorney will argue for a new trial. Mothers, men and young girls are writing to me from Miss all over the country, "The mothers De Voe said. strange at it may seem ask me for advice about their (U.R) a multitude of seeks will SCHAEFER, N. D. Jun. 29 UJ.PJ 36 hours before less than Charles Bannon, confessed slayer of s x members of one family, was to have pleaded guilty to the crime, he was lynched today by a throng of enraged citizens. Stealing up shortly after mid- the night, the men surrounded McKenzie county jail. They demanded the keys to Bannon's cell from Deputy Sheriff P. Hallam. He refused. Then the group obtained logs, battered down the the young doots and dragged slayer to the Cherry Creek bridge where he was hanged. SAVE MY DAD HE PLEADS. Bannon pleaded for the life of his father, who was suspected of helping his son kill the Haven family in their barn, but both insisted he had nothing to do with C. Haven, their three sons and an infant daughter. To prevent any possibility of a recurrence of mob violence, officials hurried the elder Bannon to Williston, some miles distant this morning. Bannon was scheduled to have pleaded guilty at a hearing Friday morning, in Schaefer and had been brought here some days ago from the larger city jail. While the citizens were dragging him from his cell, young save iny dad. Bannon pleaded His father who He's not guilty. was suspected of helping young Bannon in killing the Haven famjail along ily was held in th with a convict by the name of Mathes. Describes Funeral services for irginla Wtst Leliner, daughter ol Dr Frank L. West, were held in the Tenth wail chapel Wednesday afMrs. Leliner died at a ternoon. local hospital Sunday. Bishop K. ('. Schaub conducted were Remarks the services. made by William Evans, Jr., Dr. r nd W. W. Henderson Bishop Welti Professor Walter Schaub. (UF.i BAI.T BAKE CITY, Jan. 29. gave a vocal solo and Protessor X. Twice before Utah lias been W. Christensen played a violin secaught napping and the Utah Wa- lection. Prayers were offeied by ter storage commission intends it Professor L. M. Winson and Dr. shall not happen again. Reuben L. Hill. The choir sang So, despite the reported deple- two numbers. reclamations tion of the federal Interment took place in the Lolund, the commission voted Wed- gan City cemetery. The grave was nesday to proceed with preliminary dedicated by Ray B. West. work on various reclamation projects Including such projects as the Hyrum reservoir, Moon Lake, Provo river and (.tooseberry reservoir. It was recalled, regretfully, that on two accosions money had been available for reclamation work but C. C. Cressall of Logan was named could not lie utilized because prep- truck foreman of Cache county at aratory work had not been com- the commission meeting Wi dnespleted. day. Three applications were filed the position, John Q. Atlams, Hallam and Mr. (fressall. Bishop William Evans. W. R. Andrews and C. K. Pyle akeJ the commission for the grading and graveling of Tenth North street, leading west trom the city limits for about 100 yards. If possible, til s will lie graveled through the which is unemployment project now working on College hill. Other- The lo. al auto license bureau will be (lone in the spring, will he opened F ehi nary 2 at 172 Wise, it to the det ision reached Net'll Main stiect. aceordiig to according by the commissioneis. all umioinn e'lieiit made tod;i. It was origmallj planned to have the office in the com t house hut because of m. k of room in that building, the , nice is to he shifted across the street to the Arimo The otthe will be open dining the month of Kehtuary w itn Bishop J. 11. Watkins, Jr. in chaise ami W A But nliam as The ohite was established here to allow- lee il motorists to obtain llieir plates without sending to Salt Lake City for them. Bishop Watkins utges all car ownets to obtain their new license as soon Tile otlice will be as possible. 5 p. m. open each week day until DAM PROJECTS Cache Names New Foreman Of Trucks - BUREAU HERE i buil-ltn- - l do. It is generally telt, however, that the state will advance the money onv te-o- fund or other that unit hut the prom-to- (ons-quent- ly First Child In Providence Goes To Rest ANNOUNCED Jurors for the February term court were of the Pir3t District today as tollows: J. Lester Peterson, Amalga; Godfrey Stauffer, Providence; Alma Hatch. Lewiston; Louis Miller, ProviHyrum; Henry Braegger, Smith-Held- ; dence; Jonn E. Richards. William Telford, Lewiston; Arthur Peterson, Hyde Park; Edwin Clawson, Hyrum; Joseph P. Morrell, Logan; Fredrick Gyllens-kog- , Smithfield; Thomas G. Lewis, Logan, CUfiord Goodwin, Logari; Hyrum DeWitt, Logan; W. W. Barber, Logan; Albert Nielsen. River- He, ghts; John P. Smith, Logan; Charles E. Humphreys, Millville; Harvey Munk, Riverside; Dewey C. Griftin, Clarkston; William Greaves, IyOgan; A, A. Allen, Hyrum; William A. Miller, Hyrum; Orson Perkes, Hyde Park; Emanuel Skabelund, Logan. MANY STOCKS not r jwii third unit which is to be nam e! tut nigh unemployment imuls recently appropriated by will be undertaken this onates-yea ( i HOT IN CHICAGO CHICAGO, Jan. 29. (UP) A Janu' ary " beat wave (ontmued tt, rough- out the western half of the country today, causing mild alarm in some states and meninient in others, (specially in the cities. MOVE UPWARD NEW YORK, Jan. 29. (UP) The stock market took on a more hopeful attitude today when several stocks went upward and others Inactive for a long time began to move. Radio Corporation stock sold at higher prices. Auborn Auto lead In sales and increased price. The large steel corporations showed greatei tirniness. Explosion Described By Survivors As a Burning Cyclone; Bodies Charred Beyond Recognition. LI NT ON, Ind., Jan. 20 (UP). Seven miners who had been given up as dead were found alive at dawn today Talk On Italian Dictain the Litile Hetty mine shaft, leaving 29 known dead tor Brings Severe from a blast which late yesterday wrecked the shaft. ment Now. Official Rebuke. The death toll was fixed in an official report from the mine after the body of Fred Reed, the last to be recovered, WASHINGTON, Jan. 29 U.P WASHINGTON, Jan. 29. (U.R) All who were in the shaft when the exwas removed. The adinlutstraUon'8 attempt to of State Stimson today Secretary walkwere killed save occurred whom of nine, two cbeck the growing campaign for plosion made formal apology to Italy for cash payments to war veterans ed out last night. statements made by Major General was transferred to the house toin the earth, bratticed a Smedley D. Butler regarding PreThe other seven, caught deep Melof Treasury day. Secretary lon. Under secretary Ogden Mills and Director Frank T. Illnes of the veterans bureau, appeared before the ways and means committee to reiterate opposition to these proposals expressed before a senate committee yesterday. Mills opened the administration plea by reading to the committee the statement Secretary Mellon made before the senate finance committee and all the other letters the treasury secretary has written since the agitation first began a the ouset of the session. KANSAS CITY, Jan. 29. (U.R) Mellon opposes the proposal as Janies A. Reed, former senator, as found in the Wickersham report uneconomical. endangering the finest evidence of hvprocrisy government finance, as of little use in aiding the present busiand political cowardice exemplithe ness depression, and fied upon this earth. Speaking at a meeting of the vlteras would be more benefitted South Central Business association by holding their certificate as here last night, he said the re- insurance. port "admits prohibition has been Pointed criticism of Secretary a failure, a cause of crime and Mellon was voiced by Rep. Patento us suffering, and then tells man. Deni., Texas, in appealing force it some more. The authors to the senate finance committee what were too cowardly to say (Continued on page six) they meant end too cowardly to give the public the evidence. "Prohibition is no joke, but th" Wickersham report is the joke of the century. Nobody can discuss :t sober. Nobody understands it drunk. It is a kind of mongrel, a cross between a spotted jtyena, an African Zebra, and an American jackass with n largo proportion of the latter." JURORS ARE Die In Mine Explosion Twenty-Nin- e Rank And File Of Legion Want Pay- Of Adjectives Definite promise to cooperate in financing of the second unit of the Logan canyon load project to the extent of $37,500 provided no monfor before December ey is 31, 1931, was made by the Cache county commission Wednesday. The promise was contained in a letter .chicli was forwarded to the state road commission following The letter was in the meeting. answer toon from the state group reciv-recently which the status of the project and which i ejected all proposals made by the county commission at a meeting recently between the two groups. The promise v as made in the face of notice that a signed protest against the appropriation is being prepared end will he presented within a short time. The notice was mado bv Swen Carlson, C. W. p,rson an-- p p. Jones who appeared befov the commissioners and said that a protest is being prepared winch will be signed by a largo number of taxpayers, not only from the city but from the county. exThe county commissioners plained their actions by showing that in realltv, they are only living up to tne second part of the informal agiceuient made last year that they woild p.irticpiate in tile financing ot the first two units of the load to the extent of $75,00n At that time, it was understood that the first payment would be made in 1931 and the second ir 1932. The first payment was later advanced to 193't. It the second pajmrnt is advanced to 19.31, the county wll be forced to borrow money to meet it and this, the commissioneis have decided not to from the Knur( es and eon Report By Commission Agrees to Aid Canyon Road IN TENTH WARD NEW OFFICE FOR LICENSE 1 Variety FUNERAL HELD personality to 'It' and that preferabl consider this quality better than the more spectacular Of aspects of Bex appeal. course there is no use denying that 'it' has ome advan'It' brings fume to tages. some girls and to others it brings only trouble. I also told her that mothmodern should ers give daughters advice and be sure If they its the right kind. don't others will give them advice the wrong kind. Is daughters. (Continued on Page 3) RUSH WORK ON straightforward LEM I The first white PROV1DE.NCE. died child born in Providence here sometime Wednesday night or early this morning when Mrs. Annie Mathews Smith was taken. She was born as one of twin girls on May 28. 1861. the daughand ter of Margaret Hopkln Her twin sisMaurice Mathews. ter died several years ago. Mrs. Smith was visiting at the home of daughter, Mrs. James E. Hansen. The two slept tonight and gether Wednesday when Mrs. Hansen awoke this morning, she found that life had passed quietly away from her the sometime mother during night. Her husband. Joseph A. Smith, died several years ago. She )s survived by the following chil- - hr VoTpt Joseph A. gTith tlence; Arthur Smith of Sparks, New Geraint Smith, Nevada; York; Mrs. Norman Seager, California; Mrs. Will Mau, Logan. Two sisters, Mrs. Mary Marler of Providence and Mrs. Louis Peacock of Driggs, Idaho, also survive. snixll sixle chamber, knowing their oxygen supply would lust only a few hours, the air was becoming foul when rescue squads cleared the entry this mottling. State and federal officials announced today after a bile, survey of the situation that the explosion w iiich rocked the mine and trapped the miners a mile baok In the tunnel had been caused by gas. Survivors described the explosion us a burning cyclone," and said the charred condition of the bodies bore out their description. WINTER IN FRANCE It was impossible to make a posPARIS, Jan. 29. (U.R) Winter itive identification of the 18 bodies tempests lashed many parts of that had been recovered, as they France today while dispatches were burned almost beyond from the Franco-ItahaAlps reported a growing toll of death from avalanches and storms. Heavy snow fell in southeastern France. Chairman Named court-martiale- (Continued on Page Six) n BANKERS PLAN REAL CREAM FOR COFFEE SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 29. (U.R) There will be real cream in the coffee served today In Mr. Cifree kitchen for .the unpher's employed. Due to a local milk war Work will be sturted within a here one dairy has offered to the city free of charge, 200 gallons of very short time on the education of the farmer to farm accounting. surplus milk daily The vvoi k will be handled through the agricultural committee of the BANDITS GET MAIL Utah State Bankers association MOULTRIE, Ga., Jan. 29. (U.R) and the extension service of the A bandit who boarded an Atlanta U.S.A C. Birmingham and coast passenger This word was brought to Logan train, shot a railway postal clerk today by N. D. Salisbury, a memand escaped with two consign- ber of the bankers committee, who ments of registered mail was returned late Wednesday night sought by authorities ot this sec- from two meetings on the subject, tion today. one at Salt Lake and the other at Pro .o. The Salt Lake meeting was the HIGHER TARIFF committee and college agricultural (U.R) 29. WASHINGTON. Jan. while the Provo meeting otiictals IdaSenator Thomas, Republican, was a general one for bankers and ho, today Introduced a joint reso other Invited guests. Eugene luium which would raise the tariff many Oregon hanker, pnd Dirates on agricultural products 60 Courtney. H Otis of file agriculturI). rector per cent above liaise provided In al commission ol the American the 1930 tariff act. were also Bankers association, present at both meetings. Farm accounting with an idea of OLD AGE PENSION putting the fainter on the game baBOISE, Idaho, Jan. 29. a heated debate In tne house of sis as any big business will be the Idaho objective of the agricultural comrepresentatives, twenty-tirs- i ways and means of legislature the old age pension bill mittee and was passed by a vote of 50 to 19 working it out were taken up at College people with one member absent. Only both meetings. P. V. two members were outstanding In present included Director their opposition. They wen J. H. Cardon, Director William Peterson, Anderson of Bingham and J. H. W. W. Owens. IX P. Muriay and L R. Humphreys. County Agent Harsh of Iaitah. R. L. Wrigley of Cache county was also present at the Provo meeting. ROBBERY INVESTIGATED HARRISON, Mont., Jan. 29. (U.R) F. P. Champ, president of the state a member of the Investigation of the Harrison State association and Bank robbery and the slaying of agricultural commission of the naSheriff Frank Metzcl will close to- tional organization, was also presnight when the attorney general's ent. investigators go to Butte to complete the case. NEW PARK CHIEF COMING SAN FRANCISCO. Jan 29. (U.R) Thomas A Allen. Jr., newly apIs pointed superintendent of Bryce canyon and Zion National paiks, Utah, led Ran Francisco today by Stymour Prows, prominent local automobile, to report at Zion park business man, has been named to take over his new duties. i.iurt of honor chairman of the to HOOKED AIMEE according Logan district, W. Scout LOS ANGELES, Jan 29. (U R) Executive Preston Pond Aitn.e Sempl McPherson, evangeMr. Prows will have his fit st list was bunkoed out of $900 by a court of honor whpn Urne entire take Hungarian Baron during her district will combine in a big recent pilgrimage to the Holy land, general awards court at River the Las Angeles examiner said toHeights on February 8. day it had learned New Court Of Honor mier Mussoltnl of Italy, In a speech at Philadelphia last week. The apology waB mado two hours after Secretary ot the Navy Adams had ordered Butler, one of the most Marino American distinguished corps officers, Stimson personally made the formal expression of regret over the affair to Italian Ambassador Giacomo De Martino, who called at the state department to receive the apology. Stimson explained to De Martino that Butlers speech w'as sn "unauthorized action and informed FARMER WORK BANDITS GET LARGE AMOUNT SPRING CANYON, Utah, Jan. 29. (U.R) After being tortured for more than an hour by two bandits who captured him alone in the office, A. C. Carlson, manager of the Spring Canyon Coal company, opened the safe for the bandits. They escaped with more than $2,200. A state wide search is on for the bandits. Dern Gives Budget To Legislature SALT LAKE CITY. Jan. 29. (U.R) It was not, to say the least, a bright financial picture painted by Governor George Dern in his aanu-a- l budget message read personally to the house and senate In joint session late yesterday. The state's chief executive said Utahs groat problem, terday was how to adequately finance gorwlng state Institutions when taxes are decreasing rapidly because of lowered assessed valuation. Some Insight into the problem was revealed when the governor said that requests to the budget committee totalled $6,200,000. 'The appropriaexecutive recommends tion of $4,916,448.46. Although frankly regretting it, the governor said it was an imperative necessity to maintain the appropriations for the university of Utah and Utah Agricultural college at the same figures of two years ago This in spite of marked enrollment increases. ROTARY HEAR COUNTY HEAD L. H. Allen, chairman of tlia board of commisioners of Cache county, addressed the Logan n the various activities of the board. He also urged cooperation with the county commission in making improvements and progress in the county. Chairman Mien, Commissioner Thomas Muir and County Clerk Carl V. Mohr wete guests ot the club. Guy Cardon, chairman ot the information committee of the club gave an inspiring address to new members of the club. George W. Skidmore, member of the same committee, introduced the speakers with John II. Moser, president of the club, presiding. of the Wilbur E. Skidmore Union Knitting Mills gave an interesting description of the knitting business In Logan. He told how large groups of students are employed in the summer selling the goods of the company. He also explained how all goods at the plant is made to order to He gave interestthe customer. ing sidelights as to the amount and grade of yarn used in various articles. The Weather! UTAH Fair tonight and Friday; little changa in temperature. IDAHO Fair tonight and day. Freezing night. at |