OCR Text |
Show The Your Duty As a ciUzen of the United States and as a member of the community in wltich you live is to cast your ballot on election day. Volume 22. LOGAN. I ii (Slay By Arthur Brisbane I With which are combined the Number 252. T j Herald- - Journal ir ( ache Valley UTAH. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28. 1 ) Wanted Two States Richard B. Sheridan was one of the most brilliant young men at West Point. He made the Army football team in spite of his youth and light weight, y game played in the last Saturday, broke his spinal column and died shortly after his mother reached his bedside yesterday. Are all the football games, the college glory, the gate receipts worth that life? It is for fathers and mothers and school authorities to an- that. U. S. Land Ownership OCT 30 Dig Out Of It was Snow Storm HEUALI) JOURNAL L DENVER. Colo-- Oct. 28 (UP) Wyoming and Montana, lashed by high winds, rain and snow, recovered today from the first blizzard of the winter season. Transportation and commun- 2 . AS LEADER Wyoming, ication lines disrupted by the storm were repaired after the raging winds shifted northeastward and swung toward Minnesota. The storm originated in a low pressure area over the Canadian For plains north of Montana. two days it swept down front the north, lashed by a an hour wind. Mail planes in the path of the storm were forced to the Bus and automobile ground. traffic was disrupted seriously, communication lines were de- is more known before long that a woman enraged dangerous than a man, and known long before the Duchesse de Boillon plotted the destruction of the beautiful Adrienne Lecouvreur. actress The Duchesse thought that witn Adrienne gone the handsome Maurice de Saxe would lcU fact he her. As a matter of didnt particularlytime.love either of them at that western crime is horrible, the woman ) execute be more horrible. Every doctor knows that if sucha crime were committed deliberat was insane ately. the woman the time. Those recently selling silver exmetal short on the mrtal to advised are again change, They get out of that position. Mr. Rene what read should Leon had to say aboutK. silver CurH. yesterday, in Cyrus Ninety per newspaperstis's cent of the worlds population - Is the off gold standard fluc- and functioning on highly tuating currencies. the order of Repudiation is by abunthe day, as eviderced and susdance of moratoria, by a payments of gold pension majority of nations. France and America cant the game of the gold play standard alone like solitaire. Rene Leon suggests legislathe tion making possible contract-ed of allied debts in in gold, by payment, part some gold and part in silver at reasonable ratio. This procedure would immediately amove all danger of paper credit inflation and put an end to gold hoarding. t , WTto wants information from a real authority might write to Vogelsteln, Ludwig of the 61 BroadCity. They also, way N. as Mr. Vogelsteln says should read the pamphlet on silver by Mr. Brownell, president of the American Smelting and Refining company. If you have any silver, keep it. It is coming back as money, American Metal Co., Y. but at about $1 not at an ounce. Make a note of this prediction. 14 to 1. The Weather T I Arizona Tariff Seen Through Men Ask State Own- Graduates and other former students of the Logan Senior high school will return to the school Friday for Alumni Day exercises. Tad Bullen. student body president last year and head of the alumni organization this year. Is in charge of arrangements. The big feature of Alumni Day will be the football game between Logan and Boxelder high school for the lead iathe Ogden-Cacdivision. This game will be played at the stadium and is expected to draw a record crowd. Other features on the Alumni Day program include a special assembly program given by the alumni on Friday morning and an alumni dance Friday night. Classes will be open to old stu- dents to visit during the day also. The alumni banquet, ordinarily held on Alumni Dav, has been changed to the final day of school in the spring, when the graduating class will be officially taken into the association. he LONDON, Oct. (28' J. Ramsay MacDonald. Socialist prime minister, led the conservatives and their allies to a smashing victory in yesterdays general election. His former labor party was crushingly defeated in the Coalition government's appeal to the country for a "doctors mandate to solve tlie economic crisis. BOISE, Idaho. Oct. 28 (UP) Nearly $1,500,000 of Idaho school and institutional endowment fund money is tied up in foreclosed farm loans, an analysis prepared by the state bureau of public accounts reveals. When Idaho became a state, certain rants cf land were made to schools and 'haritable institutions. Tljese lands were sold and the money received was supposed to create a permanent fund which was to remain intact. This money was to be loaned on improved farm lands under adequate safeguards. Only interest earned by this fund was to be LABOR HAS ONLY ADD 30 MILLION AND half. FEW SEATS Used by the- institutions to Labor, which on dissolution which the land was granted. of parliament was the largest But, in the last three or four party with 280 seats, emerged years, it has been" discovered from the people's verdict with that officials to whom adminisless than 50 seats, returns tration of the fund was entrust- The national showed governor's conference. the Indications were that conference would adopt a policy of state control of unappro-- I priated lands, with private own-- ! ership as an ultimate goal. WYOMING AFTER STATE RIGHTS Perry W. Jenkins, Big Piney. Wyo.; Thomas Maddock, Phoenix, Ariz., and Charles E. Winter, Casper, Wyo., urged state ownership in fee simple of the mil-- 1 lions of acres of unappropriated public lands in the 11 western states. William Peterson, Logan. Utah director of the extension divi- -' sion of Utah State Agricultural College, urged a policy of gov- ernment control of much of the j'lands in the interests of con-- , j servation and flood control-- j The urgent need is for watershed protection that is Federal uniform, he said. control of watershed lands is the most promising outlook. Jenkins, also a member of President Hoover's committee that studied a proposal to cede the states, prethe lands sented a comprehensive plan for state ownership. j The tremendous support given the conservative party of England at the polls Tuesday was not only a triumph for a retrenched government policy but a personal triumph for Premier Ramsay MacDonald, above. MacDonald was formerly leader of the labor party but was denounced1 by this group when he joined a coalition of three other groups to urge a retrenchment and rebuilding of the governments financial structure. Elks Plan Dance Next Friday Night Special invitation notices are being sent out from the local Elks lodge 1453 announcing a Hallowe'en dance to be given free on Friday night. Special Halloween features are being worked out for a novelty program in keeping with the occasion. The dance is in the. order of a character ball. A special prize will be awarded for the best costumed Yegg Trio Loot Safe In S. L. C. President Hoover's proposal of ago to cede the states the surface rights, with the government retaining title and all rights would give the states a liabilsaidan he instead of asset, ity As a compromise. Jenkins said, the states should demand the lands in fee simple, with the government entitled only to minerals specifically reserved when the states took over the land. The federal government would keep all lands in forest areas, monuments and other present reservations. Creation of federal ranges in states refusing to accept the lands was urged by Jenkins. two years sub-surfa- ce WOODRUFF P- - SALT LAKE CITY, Oct. l'P) Three robbers, one of them masked, held up tiic George Watson Brokerage company office in the Hotel I tah today, looting the safe and escaping with amount an undertermined of cash and securities. The trio entered the office shortly before 3 p. m. tied up two men and a woman tti at were in the ofall the fice, scooped up cash in the safe, and escaped. apparently in a car waiting outside and driven by a fourth person. A search for the trio was started shortly after the alarm was given, later in the aiternoon. 28 T. A. Miss Anna Page, adult tion specialist of the state deof education, will partment meet with the Parent-Teacheassociation of the Woodruff school Friday at 4:30 p. m. The purpose is to unite the parents and teachers in their mutual problems of studying the child. Many important subjects will be educa- rs discussed. COMMUNITY Political Farm Loans Polls Oct. 28 PORTLAND, Ore., (UP) Conflicting ideas on own-- I ership of lands now held by the federal government developed at todays session of the western Big Shopping Days Million and Half Lost By Idaho Through Bad Endorsement At ing Of Lands HOOVER PLAN IS LIABILITY Richmond P.T.A. To Ah'of On Th v SERVICE 1 1 iiuisuuj community service was held at the Woodruff school last The meeting was Tuesday. opened with prayer by Warren Curtis. A group of sixth grade girls sang two selections. Shirley Allen played a piano solo and Mr. Hess gave a talk on the life of Theodore Roosevelt. A Peterson, local plumbing contractor, with Mrs. Peterson, their son. Golden, and daughter, Eldora. have just returned from a trip of more than two months abroad that took them to Denmark. Aalborg. They visited near Denmark, with Mr- Petersons father. Christian Peterson, and two sisters and two brothers whom Mr. Peterson had not seen for 23 years. Mr. Peterson declares chat ''is J trip was thoroughly invigevat-ing to all members of the family. They left Logan August 15, last. Denmark is enjoying a condition of healthful stability, and has not thus far felt the economic stress and disorder which has been t)e lot of various other sections of Europe, as well as America, i, Although his father is in he upper seventies his health i.; good, according to Mr. Peterson. He found members of his fam-- i ily enjoying good health and a fair measure of prosperity and 'contentment, he said late Tue-s-day afternoon when greeting friends in the business .section of Logan following his return. P. J. j ... j Thursday, Friday Nights er ' j ' today. government had probably more than 550 and the conservative party alone close to 500. It was an astounding victory for MacDonald, the war-tim- e pacifist and outcast, who led the Labor Party to the rule of the country and then deserted it for what he deemed the country's good.' Fighting MacDonald and the conservatives, the party was almost destroyed. Its leader, Arthur Henderson, and nearly every one of its prominent members, failed of to parliament. The country voted away from advanced political theories and back to conservative principles, including endorsement of the government's stand for a tralff. Communist candidates, of whom there were 25, were annihilated. ed proved MacDonald himself achieved a personal triumph by being from his constituency of Seaham, in Durham. When he deserted Labor for a Coalition government, he and J. H. Thomas, who followed him, were read bitterly out of the party and MacDonald was asked to resign by the Labor voters of Seaham. Both won in the election. MacDonald defied all political advice and insisted on being vindicated in his own constituency, instead of accepting a safe seat from the conservatives. He had a majority of nearly 6 000 over his Labor opponent. William Coxon. MacDonald had 28.978 and Coxon 23.027. A special musical program has been arranged for an enter-- : tainment sponsored bv the Sunday school of the Logan Second ward on Thursday evening. The affair is under the direction of the ward Sunday school An invitation superintendency has been extended to all stake officers, members of the ward and others interested in music to attend. The program is as follows: song. Put Your Shoulder to the Wheel, congregation; prayer. Bishop Charles England; baritone solo, Walter Welti; address. trombone George Raymond solo, John Smith. Jr.; reading. Mrs. O. A. Garff: solo. Professor Welti; pipe organ solo, Samuel B. Mitton; trombone solo. Mr. Smith; violin solo, N. W. Christiansen; reading, Mrs. Garff; duet from Rigolctto, Tyra Wilson and Marcus Griffin; pipe organ solo, Mr. Mitton; Benson I. T. A. To Meet Next Friday first school Par-- ; association meeting of the season will be held at the Benson school house on Friday evening at 7:30 p. m. Dr. E. A. Jacobsen, who will conduct the study group work for the year, will give his initial lecture on child training as in-- i fluenced by home and school. The following musical pro- gram will also be presented: chorus, ladies of Ninth ward: saxophone solo, Farrell Spencer; vocal solo. Ann Madsener -- good fellows . a ness. Losses in the past probably can never be recovered and must be entered in the ledgers of the state in red Ink. But these losses must serve as a warning to the people to demand that endowment funds be from graft, politics and carelessness in the future, say sponsors of the audsafe-guard- ed itFive hundred fifty-tw- o farm loans have been foreclosed in Idaho. These loans, made on 94.981 acres of land, much of which is worthless and grossly total $1,420,216,-5- 1. Over half this amount is represented in loans from the public school endowment fund. The remainder, charged against other du funds, follow: agricultural college, $67,76084: charitable institutions, $112,548.86: Insane asylun $54,350; normal school. $193,097; penitentiary. $55,408; school of science, SEEK YOUNG MAN $130,026.06. university. 9rttpi!880: loans with the $718,345.75 .'Tliese w-l- u who stuped flom the public school fund and lim from the insurance fund immobile 1 wherYtho S3V.I S?., d young a pretty, woman, as yet unidentified, was found a few hours later. StS' Tiv S16-80- Second Ward Plans Musical Program Tlie ' when political friends needed a few dollars hundred and "easy marks in many other instances in which loans were made on arid, unimproved ground.. The audit has not yet proced- ed far enough to discover definitely whether deliberate graft had partin. the redaction of .. , an irreducible fund or whether many of the unsound hums were results of poor business, carelessness and general dumb- PERSONAL TRIUMPH FOR MACDONALD U2d RICHMOND Officers committees of the Richmond, . . Pa rent Teachers association un- 1)1,,,. der the direction of Mrs. J L jJliniOr lilgH I ltlj McC'arrey, met Monday evening . . . to dUcuss plans for I he year s henool At Is Read woik and to make final arrangements inr the pubiie meeting Wonderland has in Alice to be held at the club nxmi been chosen at the Junior high Thursday night at 8 o'clock. Miss Anna Page will lecture school play. It will be presented in December. -on the proper training of chilThe play is an adaptation by dren. Subsequent lectures each Alice Gerstenberg of Lewis Car-ro- ll Tlnif'dav night for a period of s book. Alice in Wonderland 12 weeks will be given by Dr. the Looking Glass. J. Morris Godfrey. A very prof- and Through acts and itable course ha- - been outlined The play isof in30 three members. and a good atlenriarire is de- hasA a cast of the best modern plays ever sired. reading of the play was to be staged in Logan, Miss given by Miss Theresa Pugh, director. Wednesday morning in Susan Glaspel is the author. REPORT CARDS SENT OUT A the library at the school. Practically every member of the cast is experienced in amaout by large number of students, insent were cards and exteur productions through pre- theR(lrt Logan Senior high school terested toin dramatics cast of vious work with the college. for the try pecting Tuesday. high school and Little Theater A new system of sendng the the play, attended. plays. j cards home with the students NO TARIFF Members of the cast are Mil-l- is being used this year instead WASHINGTON. Oct. 28 (UP) Ryan. Lila Peters. Ludecn of mailing the cards as has C. S. Kelly of New York, preJensen, Richard Costly. Boyd been done heretofore. Pulley. Oralie Cragun, Clayton The change has been neces- sident of the Anaconda Copper Cheney, Helen Johnson, Floyd sitated through the decreased Mining company told the UniMorgan. Beatrice Hogensen and school budget, to ted Press today that he is opaccording Vera Jackson. posed to a tariff on copper. Principal George S. Bates. College Play Ready For Alison's House, the 1931 varsity play at the Utah State S O- Agricultural college, will be prein the college auditorium sented Fair tonight and UTAH: northwest on Thursday and Friday nights. colder Thursday; A competent cast, working unportion tonight. der the direction of Professor has comIDAHO: Generally cloudy to- Chester J. Myers, night and Thursday; moderate pleted all work on the play and expect to put on the usual fintemperature. ished production given annually TuesMaximum temperature in the college play. The play won the Pulitzer day. 43; one year ago. 53. last prize for the best play of the Minimum temperature 31season of 1930-3- 1 and is one night, 34; one year ago, i OCT. 31 -- i Kipling f) Watch for Startling Bargain Announcements in Thursdays VINDICATED! PUBLIC LAND The walrus and the carpenter invited the little oysters to "a pleasant walk, a pleasant talk along the briny beach. They had it, and of those little oysters only the shells were left when the walk ended. President Hoover and Premier Laval have had their pleasant walk and pleasant talk. From London and Berlin comes information that those two nationalities, observing the Hoover-Lavpleasant walk and pleasant talk, feel that they, stroyedHigh mountain passes receivBritain and Germany, have played the part of the little ed from five to eight inches or snow. The lower elevations were oysters. for a time blanketed by the Germans expect nothing but snow or drenched throughly by rainstrouble. They are used to itTemperatures throughout the But the British are hurt. They Coal 'prestige in region dropped suddenly. feel that their a dealers in the area were happy, suffered. Only Europe has little while ago they were fin- as orders poured into their offices. It was the first visitation ancing France in the war. of winter. Coal mines were reopened and In California a woman confesses that she killed two other hundreds of men. out of work for the last few months, again women and packed their bodsurwere given employment. The ies in trunks. You are not a man in demand for coal was heavy, and prised to hear of the man in on the highways heavily laden the case. Seek crimes of violence committed trucks plied between the cities and the mines. by women. al Price 5 Cents. Friday and Saturday Yale-Arm- swer - DOLLAR DAYS ? More Money. writer- FIVE OCLOCK EDITION 1 b Peterson Msks Seek The Man. man begins to think, Dr. Will Durant, all is lost. LOGANS GIGANTIC j Walrus And Carpenter When FolksSay Daily Herald, the Daily Herald and The Journal (Copyright, 1931) Is It Worth It? What Benson SpS $n-u,zio.- oi. dark-haire- SLAYER TO LEAVE LOS ANGELES, Oct. 28 (UP) EACH! MAN IS j - Winnie Ruth Judd probably! will leave here tomorrow for Phoenix where she night must murdered she that face charges Sam- her two friends. Hedvig uelson and Mrs- Agnes Leroi. GET DIVIDEND PHILADELPHIA Oct. 28 Sr ' Earl Weaver of SMITHFIELD Preston. Idaho, is in a Logan 'JPi St tody and scratches, as a re- of an automobile accident dividend from $3sult annually to $2 annually. Direc- --, ' tors declared a quarterly divileaver was returning dend of 50 cents, payable Nov. from Ggden to Preston after Nov. 30 to stockholders of record a car 0f cattle to be loading the In the preceding quarter t0 California. With a hi dividend was reduced from $4 companion he was driving along S3. annually to about one mile north of Smitli- field when his machine went out of control and turned over DEFEND HARDING several times in a borrow pit. TOLEDO, 'o., Oct 28 UP) a wheel The defense moved today to de- - It is reportedthat fend the character of a former! came off the machine, president as witnesses resumed testimony, attacking the reputation of Nan Britton, whose book "The President's Daughter" attaches paternity of hei child to the late President War- NEW YORK. Oct. 28. (UP)- ten O. Harding. !The stock market today broke to new lows for several days MAY WITHDRAW jn more active turnover. MEXICO CITY. Oct. 28 (UP) converged pressure Heavy The Southern Pacific railroad most 0f the day on U. S. Steel, of Mexico will have to voply the railroad shares and some of for liquidation under bankrupt- the utilities. from A rally late in the day incy laws and withdraw Mexico if it loses its wage dis- duced bv another flurry In pute with the railway workers wheat failed to holda when the burst of union, E. B. Sloane. local rep- grain reacted on resentative of the line, told selling at the highs which were new tops tat the seaspf), the United Press2 - |