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Show s EVERYONE SHOULD ATTEND THE FAIR fj fj cj fj cRv (5- 6v - (Editorial) SEE CACHE YOU SEPT. 15. 16, THE FAIR 17 dla 14 1931) R? Rp During the three days of the fair, the Cache county fair grounds in Logan will be the meeting place of all of Cache Valley. It is the one big thing that the entire valley should have in common and which everybody should attend. Make arrangements now to spend at least one day at the fair and become acquainted with the rest of Cache Valley. It wiii repay you a thousandfold in education, entertainment and companionship. all ex- tremely worthwhile. The entertainment features such as the big rodeo which is to be held every atternoon, the horse pulling matches and the horse show aie arranged so that everyone will obtain the utmost in enjownont from them. There remains one important feature of the Cache county fair in common with every other fair in the United States that has not et been mentioned. -- "9 ZD re su What Folks tntis Say- - is- - A orlntal really profound scholar is one who can tell a Chinese soldier from a Chinese fed ji- - bandit. dr. E. With which are combined the Cache Valley Daily Herald, the Daily Herald and The Journal. LOGAN, UTAH, !nd 1931. 11, FOUR O'ClOCK EDITION Price 5 Cent CACHE FAIR Fair Beckons Kids Tuesday from the UNITED SEPTEMBER MONDAY, RF DIRECTOR Flashes j tural and industrial products of Cache Valley, are Herald-Journ- al Pages Today By Arthur Brisbane (Copyright, 6j CV me The Number 214. Volume 22. PTF3 AT COUNTY c f take advantage of everything that is offered during the three days of the 1931 program. Each year since far brjc in 1911, the Cache county fair has portrayed the history of Cache Valley. It is not a history in words bound between the covers of a book but rather a live, animated history that must be taken advantage of as the opjwrtunity presents itself. For this reason, no one should miss the Cache county fair this year. The thousands of exhibits of every conceivable kind, showing the varied and bountiful agricul The Cache county fair, the nineteenth since its inauguration in 1911, opens Tuesday morning at the fairgrounds in Logan. It will remain open for three days with a full program arranged for practically every minute. Every true Cache Valley citizen should make it his aim to siend at least one full day at the fairground. It is every citizens duty and will he their pleasure if they WELL c d .11 fg se os PRESS le, Li SPEEDY TIME (U.R) 14. LONDON, Sept. Flight Lieutenant G. H. Stain-fortofficial average time in winning the Schneider cup was 379-0- 5 miles an hour, the Royal Aero club announced today. Stainforth was timed by stop watches at the race course off the solent as reaching his highest speed at 404.275 miles an hour. Watch Snowden, Fighter Sales Tax Coming? Belgium Laughs Last. One Rich City. Small Sum Stolen In Robbery Saturday Night Snowden, Phillip fighting chancellor of the British exchequer, possesses qualities that England needs. Come the world against us, England yet shall stand. That is Snowdens challenge as he announces taxes enormously increased, a slash in the dole, in the pay of teachers, army, navy and police, higher taxes on beer, gasoline, tobacco. Those that dance must pay the piper. It was expensive dancing for this world during .. that big war. Even we, who didn t start the must the or band, hire dancing pay our part' of the bill. Senator Reed of Pennsylvania, h on the Republican TNan-- il committee, demands a sales two thousand k to produce llions annual revenue. He is some posed by merchants, and the little people who realize te at It would make them con-bu- nt to the expense of without realizing it. a sales pparently, however, s is coming. The government ast meet its expenses one way gov-ime- another. 10 laughs last, laughs best, ium had a sad time when war started. You remember lump t not more than one of but-ctc- ., lgar, one small pat sake. for Belgiums s Belgium finds herselfof pros-athe in the middle her bonds abov.e iswithslump, a high gold cover-o- f 66 per cent of her notes, plants antiquated industrial were destroyed by Germans Ger-y- s been replaced, at mod-plants expense, with new of greater capacity, e head of the Belgian Nail bank. Paul Van Zealand, economic ders Belgiums is the most secure in all ,Q in spite of extravagance, is still rich, ith good credit. Last year it lent more than six hunched one hundred illiorv dollars, illion more than it cost to m our national government Tore th big war. Today it is ile to borrow twenty millions 1.45 per cent interest. This loan, for three months, fleets partly New Yorks good credit and ore emphatically the present ixtraordinary ease in money. New York City, al-g- ed ; President Hoover and Seere-r- y Mellon borrow eight hun-e- d millions to help out in this aergency, the loan repayableg, twenty years, sound financ-- at low interest. Governor Roosevelt, who has n, ready started the 1932 cam-iig- r objects to the twenty-a- loan as unfair to the fui be still more unfair the future to let this country to the bow wows just now. it would We have all been told ten thousand times that government should not go into any business, and that this government cant run any business efficiently or honestlv. The Canadian National Railroad company, owned by the peoDle of Canada, surprise you with two facts. In Canada railroad public ownership succeeded where private ownership had failed. And the National Canadian railway is able to borrow money now at four and a half per cent on twenty-yea- r bonds. How many privately owned American railways could do that just now? The Weather WORK TAKEN hs BODY FOUND SAN MATEO, Calif., Sept. Safe blowers, apparently specialists in their line, obtained between $150 and $200 from the safe in the book store of the Logan Senior high school sometime during Saturday night or The morning. early Sunday book store is in the high school main building. The job was done after- 9:40 p. m. Saturday when Howard Willmore, custodian, made his last round of inspection of Mrs. buddings and groundsWillmore discovered the crime when in the building Sunday Sunday morning.. h Pioneer Utah Builder, the contract for the giant procontractor The died of cancer in a hospital here Sunday without ever having set foot on the site of his last and biggest undertaking. Knowing for years that he was fighting a losing battle against the disease, Wattis merged his Utah Construction company and five other firms into the six companies and captured the worlds biggest contract to l):ild the huge barrier across the Colorado river. Then from his hospital bed he directed operations until he was too weak to continue. Last Saturday he lapsed into a coma and Sunday he died. Dr. Walter-BCoffey, noted cancer research specialist, was in constant attendance during his last hours. His associates in the six companies, ordered by Wattis on his full death bed to proceed speed with the dam, were expected to meet soon and select a new pres lent. Its just another job, the mer Utah Construction leader said when he learned bis bid had won the dam contract. I investigating the death of one man while funeral services were being arranged in other parts of the state for two others who were victims of automobile accidents. BODY IS MYSTERY AuthPROVO, sept. 14 (UP) - SALES CHICAGO, DECREASE Sept. 14 (UP) Sears, Roebuck & Co. today announced a decrease of 12.8 per cent in total sales for the month of Aug. 14 to Sept. 1, inclusive as compared with sales for the same period in 1930. OVER REXBURG, Idaho, Sept. 14 (UP) Bound over to district court on a charge of man- Hess, Herald-Journ- ' railroad. Wattis never admitted to his associates that he had lost hope in his fight against cancer. He always assured them that he would be out of herg in a few bail. Johns waived hearing on a charge of transportation of liquor. Five hundred dollars of his bond was furnished on the second charge. $2500 weeks. The contractor was born on a farm near Ogden, Utah, and as a young man rose rapidly in his field. His widow, brother, two sisters and seven grandchildren survived him. It Happened This Way At 14 staff writer, portraying the early school Other history of Loganarticles will follow in subsel. quent issues of the - Herald-Journa- BY RUSSELL HESS From a school population of 577, as shown by a census of December 1, 1872, to a 1931 enrollment approaching 3,000 has been the growth of the Logan city school system in 09 Carried rn ' 4 KILL son of a Scotch couple living on Mesquite flat was brought to the hospital. The child the parents said, had a penny stuck in its throat. They were afraid to trust it to the stage, they said, fearing a jar would cause the infant to swallow the coin and it would be lost. A surgeon recovered the penny and then charged infant the parents $5 for the eration. Their net loss is NEW YORK, op- . -- fr 1. 1 Sept. fl V V ki (UP)-Pis- tols blazing in the hands of three youthful gunmen holding on a .speakeasy in Greenwich Village killed one policeman and wounded another today. Sergeant Timothy Murphy, 48, was fatally wounded when he rushed into the speakeasy after hearing a womans scream. A few 'minutes later Policeman Fred Knoche, 30, was shot twice in the right shoulder by one of the fleeing youths. The first entry was made by Charles C. Hirst and the last by John T. Caine, Jr. Mr. Caine Is now auditor of the Utah State Agricultural college MANY INTERESTING SIDELIGHTS SHOWN For years the old minute book was treasured by J. Z. Stewart. A few months prior to his death, early In 1931, he turned over the record to Supt. Louis A. Petersen of the city schools. Many interesting sidelights are thrown on school problems and student life in Logan during this relatively pioneer period which the minute book chronicles. Charles O. Card. Alvin Crockett and Robert Davidson are the Cp rp rsp rVp rp The minutes of December 1, 1872, gave a brief resume of school history beginning July 25 of that year when a school ordinance was passed. This divided the city into school wards corresponding in number and boundaries to the various ecclesiastical wards of the L. D. Tuesday is the opening day of the Cache county fair. It has also been designated as school day and the grounds will be crowded with youngsters during the day. Like this young lady, many of them will have their own pets on display while others will have work done by them in the schools shown. The Cache county schools are dismissing for the fair, some on Tuesday and some on Wednesday or Thursday. The Logan city schools are all dismissing Tuesday in order that the children might attend. - church maintained at that time in Loagn. A school election to name trustees was held BELIZE, British Honduras, Sept. 14. U.R) (By radio to United Press) Between 1.500 and 2,090 persons are dead in the hurricane-crushe- d city of Belize, it was believed today. Survivors, moving swiftly among the ruins, burning the debris and bodies to prevent an epidemic, were too pressed with the Immediate demands tor relief and prevention of further disaster, to engage In an authoritative check. Lack of water, lack of food, and the threat of another storm of hurricane intensify which was reported veering towards the north of this city lent desperation to the situation. There is little left here, however, to engage the grip of a new storm. Nothing bi t a few concrete houses are left standing. August 5, 1872. Receipts from the tax levy of that year totaled $2,610.58. The secretary was allowed ten percent for collecting and five per cent for disbursing the funds of the schools. It was decided to establish a high school, and for that purpose the Lindquist hall was rented for one year, commencing on December 13, 1872. HI MS PUT A rollicKing three-acomedy West of Broadway, sponsored will the be by Logan Band, staged at Nibley hall on Sepct tember 24 and 25. Miss Lavern Franklin of the National Producing company of Kansas Gty, is here and is in charge of the production. Ail local talent is to be used. The comedy is accompanied by a chorus and a big baby pageant will also be staged- Pictures on page two LOS ii ANGELES, .iu -- Aimee Sept. Semple McPher- voice instructor. n, a superb Mrs. McPherson staged her newest wedding at sunrise in an airplane in Arizona, the state in which she first appeared after her purported kidnaping in 1926. On the marriage license took out in Yuma, Ariz., the now blonde Evangelist gave her age as 38. Hutton, who has been a soloist and music teacher around Mrs. McPherson's Angelus temple for the past six years, said he was 30. Em so happy, Mrs. McPherson said, and blushed as a bride should. And we really are going to do so many important things together. Were going to work right along on Angelus temple business and Im sure two heads are better than one. I am the happiest man in the world, said Hutton. We are going to put shoulders to the wheel and make things hum- We are mighty happy. Always KING III hors- of Colborns AH conducted as be announced. The previously horse pulling matches for the light and medium classes will be Tuesday at 9 a. m. at the race track. The heavyweight class and the horse show will take place at the race track at 7 o'clock Wednesday evening, the second day of the fair. The best teams which contested at the Boxelder county fair will also be here. The lineup for the exhibits was never better, especially for the livestock. A number of fine Lincoln sheep have arrived from Bear Lake county. The W. SHansen ranch will be represented with a fine lot of Every fox and mink pen will be filled. In fact there will be no vacant pens or stalls at the fair groundsGOOD LINEUP FOR MIDWAY The midway promises to be very attractive writh a good line of concessions and shows. These are all in charge of Don Edwards and William Walton. This is no carnival. The general admission at the main entrance of the fair will be the same as has been charged for the past ten years. The prices for the rodeo and racing program are lower than is charged by other fairs comparable to this fair. There is no extra charge for grandstand seats. The chutes have been rearranged so that every part of the show can be seen from every seat in the three grandstands. It is suggested that people bring cushions or blankets for their seats as this will make it much more comfortable. There will be no cushions sold at the fair grounds. The first evening of the fair will be a free gate. A charge will be made the second evening, as there is the horse show and heavyweight horse match. Ram-bouille- - TALK IN LOGAN United States Senator William 14. son, internationally knqwn Evangelist, was a bride for the thirl time today. Once widowed, once divorced, she took a new husband yesterday when she married David Hutton, her. 250-pou- - c- SOI. Do For New Hubby S. arrived. - I 10GAN fast running race the fair will Cl 14 ARRIVE rodeo stock is In the center field of the fair grounds- - They will be rested and in good condition for the program Tuesday afternoon. Entries for the horse pulling matches continue to come in. It appears there will be at least thirty entries for these contests. The entire program of ;' If T " rf'lS' ! j Aimee Says on a feathernot to jar it, the UTAH: Generally fair tonight yearsThe 1872 census of children and Tuesday; cooler southeast between the ages of six and portion tonight. sixteen is found in an IDAHO: Fair tonight and ledger containing minutes of the city school board from Tuesday; no change in December 1, 1872 to July 22, first trustees named. age-wo- es have . STONY FORD, Ariz., Sept. bed, so as Y RUNNING Many : Stony Ford 1882. al te' , slaughter at preliminary hearing here, A. R. Johns, Logan, was more excited when I was Utah, was today at liberty on building the Western Pacific (5N by Russell I fi-- Logan Schools Grow From 577 To 3000 In 59 Years Editors Note This is the first of a series of articles I 3,-890.995 orities were still mystified today over the identity of a youth whose decomposed body was found embedded in mud of Utah lake Saturday. BOUND All the rodeo performers at the Peach Day celebration at Brigham City and some from other cities, have arrived for the Cache county fair and rodeo. There has never been in this section of the country such a large lineup of expert bronc riders, trick ropers, bulldogger3 and calf ropers as there will be fit the Cache county fair and A number are world of these Many Eodeo. took part in the big at Pendleton. With the arrangement of the Chutes, the arena, and the excellent condition of the race track, there should be some Records broken in rodeo and racing events at the fair. ject. THREE DEATHS safe-cracki- ng For Greatest Of Exhibits SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 14 (UP) New leaders organized today to push construction of Hoover dam after the death of William H. Wattis, president of the six companies which held 14. SALT LAKE CITY, Sept. 14 (UP) Authorities today were OVERLOOK SMALL SUM IN SAFE All Performers Ready W. H. Wattis, Dies Of Cancer The nude body of a young expectant mother, found beside a highway near Rockaway beach, provided the San Francisco Bay district with a new death mystery today. - While making off with nearly $200, the burglars overlooked about $45 in currency, silver and checks which was also left in the safe, according to Principal George S- Bates. He is was convinced the an act that had been thoroughly studied out before toeing carhed out. Whoever did the job did not overlook the cash register, but scorned taking the contents, just a few pennies. Sunday morning, Police Chief Patrolman Gilbert Mecham, Russell Knowles, and Deputy Sheriff N. C. Peterson investigated the book store quarters. Entrance had been gained, it is thought, through a window of the club room in the basement directly under the office of Principal Bates. A window and the door of this room which leads into a basement hall were open. Glass in the front door of the bookstore had been broken out. A pick and a heavy steel bar, such as are used in railroad construction work, were lying on the floor In front of the blown safe. These had been stolen from the O. S. L. tool room. One of the heavy steel doors of the safe had the inner steel framework blown from the outer steel late as though shaved clean with a knife. The explosion shot a steel ring, part of the fittings of the combination lock, through an upper window pane of an east window of the book store. Soap, used to plug up holes where lock fittings were set, before the or whatever other explosive was used, splattered over the woodwork about the room. The Logan Coal company office at Sixth West and Second South was also entered Saturday night or early Sunday morning. The desk of Manager J. A. Hulme had been forced open. Nothing is missing so far as investigation has determined. .D (O R) - ON TUESDAY te ie h show-woma- H. King will speak at the is club luncheon at noon Tuesday, according to the announcement today of L. W. Hovey, chairman of the program committee. Senator King is expected to talk on the silver problem. He is one of the prime movers in the calling of a silver conference and blames the silver slump for a large part of the world-wid- e depression. The meeting has, been thrown G. .A., LindPresident open by quist in order to give everyone an opportunity to hear Senator King discuss this vital problem. Reservations for the luncheon meeting may be made with Mr. Cache Valley Hovey at the Banking company or at the Bluebird where the luncheon will be held. Aged Idaho Couple pulling In Auto Accident PRESTON A car was completely demolished and an elderly lady severely injured as a result of an over turned automobile at Dayton. An aged couple, Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Byers. 68 and 69 respectively, of Blackfoot. Idaho were enroute to Kansas tto visit relatives. They failed to make the turn at the Dayton Service station and their car left the road and turned over several REVOLUTION FAILS times. Mrs. Byers was taken to the VIENNA, SeM,. 14 (UP) An honorable peace was declared Preston hospital where it was today by leaders of the nation- found she had received a broken alist Heimheimwphr after a collar bone and three broken ribs. Mr. Byer was not seriously fruitless attempt at armed injured. NEW YORK, Sept. 14 (UP) Last minute support for United States steel common stock arrested a terrific wave of selling today on the stock exchange. Support for steel came after the issue had made a new low off 2 8 since 1921 at 78 from the previous close. Dozens of other high grade industrials had been carried down with steel: utilities made new lows for the' bear movement; industrials tm the average were at new lows for years and raii3 for 33 years, 4. i 3-- ts. ie k. |