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Show After several weeks of intensive campaigning on the part of different candidates seeking municipal offices in Tigan, citizens will go to make known their choice for offices. the polls Tuesday In the Herald-Journtoday, the candidates have statements summing up their beliefs and attitudes on various city problems. If you are a registered voter, it will pay you to go through these problems and statements carefully. Weigh carefully the men who are seeking office and the platforms on which they are running. Remember, they will be at the head of the Logan city government for the next two years. Make your own. decision as to who you want for mayor, commissioner and auditor, front the evidence i evented, then go to the mils and cast your ballot. A list of polling places will he found on page two. Remember, it is your duty as an American citizen to vote Tuesday. al The Your Duty , a citizen of the United States and sts a. member of the community in which you live is to cast your ballot on election As day. Volume 22. Number E The racket business Isnt what it's cracked up to be. Alphonse (Searfaee) Capone. 1 With which are combined the Cache Valley Dafly Herald, the Daily Herald and The Journal 12 Pages Today 25(5. umal qJJ What Folks Say LOGAN, NOVEMBER UTAH, MONDAY, 2, 1 001. FIVE OCLOCK EDITION Price 5 Cents. ATTEMPT Today By Arthur Brisbane , (Copyright, 1931? N ' ML Pegging The Pound. WORLDS L ARC JEST TOO BEAUTIFUL FIRE FIGHTER PLANS t French and American bankers urge the British to peg" their pound at some definite price, the higher the better, and do it quickly. remember British bankers that France cheerfully pegged her franc, at twenty per cent of it's value, and paid debts with these baby francs. They know that, the lower the pound falls, the easier it will be for them to pay off their main debt of thirty two and a half bllliops . of dollars- If they could imitate France and reduce the pound by eighty per cent, they, like the French, could pay off debts on a twenty per cent basis. They will not do may follow the that, but French reduction half way. While the world goes its way, pegging pounds, or talking about depression, and other minor things, Japan is making such minor worries seem unimportant. Japan is in Manchuria, where she invested more than a billion dollars, and Japan intends to stay there. Russia, . resenting what she Japans Impudence, ,all sends more troops dose to Japanese troops. It seems incredible that Russia should risk success for her five year plan in a war, but anything is possible, Japan, having defied the league of nations, would not hesitate to do the same to Russia. Watch the east. v Henry Ford has resumed his minimum pay of six dollars a remembered that Mr. Ford added one dollar to tne six dollars AFTER THE DE-PRESSION BEGAN, as his con- tribution in an emergency. Mr. Ford has not reduced wages, he has cancelled an extraordinary increase made under extraordinary circumstances. It is to be remembered, also, by intelligent workers, that the minimum wage of six dollars a day, now restored, was established by Ford when it meant an advance of ONE HUNDRED PER CENT in general wages. it J ; is C. , . Henry Fords voluntarily increase of one dollar a day after the Wall Street panic, costing him in twenty two months, in ETRA wages $35,160,101, amounts to more than all other depression contributions put together. Souvent semme varie "often Woman woman is different. discovered the Empress Eugenie liat. Hat factories started up, thousands of hats were made in haste, overnight almost every woma had an Empress Eugenie hat on her head, and was looking, with one eye, from under the brim. With that one eye she saw that every other woman had an Empress Eugenie hat, down on cne side, up on the other. Now no woman wants, an Empress Eugenie hat, the fashion is as dead as the Empress herself. Hatmakers complain bitterly and wonder what else they can invent to make an appeal to womans fancy. Let us hope the foolish little skullcaps will not come back. There is no beauty in them for the women, no profit for merchants. The most becoming hat wo- man can wear is an old fashioned, leghorn hat, with soft, wide brim, around it a wide blue, or pink ribbon, falling eighteen Inches down the back. If that be "mid-victoria- n, make the most of it. The Weather 4 - I FA. AL ACCIDENT ROCK SPRINGS, Wyo , Nov. 2 tlU'i Comoination of loose gravel and an inexperienced driver Eugenie Dies, Again. day. J UNITED PRESS Henry Ford Resumes , 1 from the Watch Able Japan. & YEGGS FLEE Flashes PRICE JAIL had cost the life today ot one roan and injured the other. Lands In France From Trip To Hoover Meeting Forty Teams And Men To Be Used In Work Road grading work for forty rran'oe, Nov. 2 teams and teamsters on the Premier Pierre Laval reroad grading proturned today from the United ject will start Tuesday morning. States, voicing his confidence The Cache county commissionthat Franco will keep th ers selected men for the job on plans for intern'a-tionFaith collaboration discussed at following a conference Saturday with waid bishops of Logan, Washington. and southern Park, Hyde He announced his plans to contowns in Cache county. arrange an international Ms '315 Workmen have been selected pounds, Rohie ference on reparation revision from those recommended by the Scott, above, of Provo, is early in December. the first fireman on the ward bishops. The county comIS HAILED AS spot when they yell Fireman missioners, making a statement HERO CONQUERING save my child in his home through County Clerk C. V. Hailed by a blare of bands town. Scott is believed to be Mohr Monday morning, declared and shouts of a crowd that the largest fireman in the world. that they had been guided in cheered him as a conquering making their selection of a hero, the swart, smiling preworking crew by the thought that the men with families who mier landed on French soil with .he had were most needed on the Job the knowledge that should have first consideration. firmly upheld the policies . of The graveling work beginning his government abroad. The conservations in WashTuesday morning will be taken Jihan up at the intersection of the Proington accomplished morq vidence lane with the Logan I had hoped for, Laval said as he landed at the Hyrum road- - This is at a point where the paving ends about a quay where a crowd on holiday because of Memorial day and quarter of a mile south of the L. WRIGLEY By R. Wcllsville-Hyruroad intersecAll Saints day had gathered in County Agent tion immediately south of the the bright sunshine. "Primarily the conversations At present we have nb stor- Logan river bridge. Clerk Mohrs office has been resulted in mutual agreement age reservoir for water but the for consultation before political busy notifying the men chosen soil , can be used for storage will to report to Road action in the future. This purposes if the surface water is that they are William Follett. Supervisor permit France liberal action in. applied now. Most of the Three scraper teams will be Europe. exCache in is ground County I want to assure Americans tremely dry, and while we have used in the gravel pit, and four the that France will keep she iaith. had a good rain, it1 men will be employed with I will personally invite pai .la- recently Larger road equipment of the was insufficient to wet the ment to take initiative possibly ground beyond a few inches be- county, which is to be employirf audacious measures for low We dont know ed in the grading work. with Germany, and whatthethesurface. The countv commissioners bewill do for us. winter to rehabilitate We lieve that the work given men in other steps of hope for a great amount Hoover President families on this project, yrith Europe. snow does a come if lot and it be undertaken stressed, and I agree, that will not be too much even if and the one to Webster-Lewis-toy n on In grading the helping Ls filled with water depends the ground feet. on her to get road, will materially relieve this fall. unemployment situation in FRANCE WILLING TO It is, therefore, important that the Cache county. Mr. Mohr said farmers who can make use of DO HER SHARE morning. Monday ' France is willing to go far. the fall water do so, especially those districts where there She asks only the loyal efforts !s been a water If it is dec.med shortage this of Germanyis season. that the reparationsis burden to localities the vegeIn some witling too great, France corivene in an effort to reduce tation is practically dead and if fall is' water it will debts (all applied this all debts in- revive the plants and they will clude war debts owed the United be ready to make an early that growth next spring. So why not States.) But I must stress France and Belgium must be fill the soil now with water, the mateiial then the fall, winter and spring paid in full forwar. be sufficient to damages of the must ae allowed stoimstheshould give plants an adequate Mrs. Sarah Ann Lewis, 62, 'France also supply of water for the first widow of H. B. Lewis, who died to judge lie.-- own secur.ty next of year.. crop hay four years ago, passed away at her home, 444 West First South, Sunday noon. She was born in England, Ednwood, Durham, Only One Ticket Is 16, 1869. Listed In Wellsville March will be held Funeral services in the Logan Second ward chaof NFW YORK. Nov. 2 WELLS VTLLE Only one tick- pel under tlie direction in advance of the et is listed for the municipal Bishop Charles England, Wedelection day holiday tomoirow election in Welhville with Mayor nesday at 2 p. m. bi ought the slock market down W. O. Christensen seeking Surviving her are the followsons and daughters; Mrs. after an curlier rise today and ing tne list closed ii regular. P. Lcatliam is the Cairie Dowdle, Salt Lake City; William Volume was about, the same candidate for four year coun- Mrs- Barbara Barrett, Benson five-hoas last Friday, the previous cilman, Parlev Murray, Jamesn Ward; William A. Lewis, River ' session. Parker and William R. Popple-to- Heights; Russell Lewis, Benson r The New York financial and councilmen Ward; Milton Lewis. Logan; also are while Lamont Allen the following brothers and siscommodity markets andfen banks candidates lecwill be closed tomorrow for recorder and James R. Coop- ters: Mrs. G- H. Coley, Lewistion day, a legal holiday. er for treasurer are the other ton; Mrs. William Waddups, The firmer wheat market had nominees on the ticket. Juniper, Idaho; Mrs. W. K. a good effect oil both stocks This group of candidates was Tarbet, Arimo, Ida-- ; Mrs. Hyrum and bonds in ths early trading. inadvertently left out in the Lloyd, American Falls; Thomas Stocks opened film and moved somplete listing of tickets which Wilson, Pocatello; Albert Wilson. Lewiston, and Arthur Wilwas carried in the Herald-Journup until noon wharf the market turned dull as traders turned on Saturday. son, Wellsville. their attention to the grain pits. In the last hour timid traders unloaded some of their holdings and buyers were more wary with 'the result that prices sagged fractions to more than a point dsJ lrom the highs. LE (UP) HAVRE, al funeral set I SALT LAKE CITY. Nov. 2 (UR) Further investigation into the death Saturday night of Clifton Taylor, 12, was scheduled today as funeral services for the young boy scout were arranged m Ger-man- king -- - ur two-yea- al Hunters N MAN DIES of the death of Dr. William B. Secrist, former Logan and Fair UTAH tonight physician and surgeon, has been Tuesday; little change in tem- received from Los Angeles, perature. practiced in Franklin, in IDAHO Fair tonight and Idaho., Rmithfield and Logan Cache valley many years. Later Tuesday; cooler tonight. in Salt Lake Maximum temperature Sun- he made his home City, moving to Los Angeles day. W; one year ago, 57. Minimum temperature last three years ago- - One daughter and three sons survive. night, 3$; one year go 34. Word NORTH BEND. Wash., 2. (U.R) A week-en- d Burn Nov. King hunting trip into eastern Washington ended in tragedy late yesterday when five men and an English Setter dog were killed in the crasn of their airplane near Snoqual-mi- e Pass. Four of the men were prominent in Seattle professional circles. The fifth was the pilot. The vict.ms were Dr. Russell J. McCurdy, president cf the County REFUSE TO WORK Okla , Nov. HENRYETTA, 2 Between 750 and 1,000 coal miners refused to resume their work in the Henryetta mining district today in protest to wage reductions. fllPi KILLS SELF POCATELLO, Idaho, Nov. 2 (U) Frank Vaughn, 74. team- I TEAMSTER ster, methodically attended to his team last night and then stepped out of the barn and shot himself dead- Despondency and lonliness impelled the act. UTAH MAN DIES DENVER, Nov. 2 (t.P) ? The Bren body Of William David nan, president of the Utah Fuela who . died from eSnp&ity, he heart attack Sunday while was' a passenger on a Denver and Rio Grande Western tram, will be returned to Salt Lake City for burial this afternoon. RALPH IN BAD WASHINGTON, Nov. 2 U.P) broRalph J. Capone, younger ther of the A1reputed Chicago Capone, must gang leader. immediately begin service of the three-yejail sentence imposined on him for attempted come tax evasion as the result of a supreme court ruling handed down today. ar MEN AT WORK TOOELE, Nov. 2 (L.P Five hundred and fifty men w ere thought happy today in the ranks of that they had left the enunemployed and were again The gaged in productive work. smelter of the International reopened company Smelting yesterday and created 400 full time jobs. STEAMER CRIPPLED BOSTON, Nov. 2 (l.P Three 1 d steam quarter-- c e n t u r o trawler Patrick J. OHara of Boston, with 21 men aboard, is of crippled and in urgent need assistance, she radioed to coast guard headquarters here at noon today. HOLD UP JEWELER Anz , Nov. 2. U.P gill student from Columbia univers.ty who ventured alone into the heart of Apacheland lost her life because a stalwart young Indian became enamoured of her and could no longer resist her charms. This was disclosed here today by J. A. Street, department of just.ee investigator, who announced that Golney Seymour, 21 year old Apache, had stabbing Miss Heniretta Sehmerler, 25, to death after criminally assaulting her. The erime oecinre-- l on remote White River Indian reservation last July. Seymour called at the g.rls cabin, where she lived alone, miles away from other dwellings, to accompany her to a dance. En route to the dance she resisted his attentions. and during struggle Seymour lost control of himself, his confession related. surMuch of the mystery rounding the death of Miss Sehmerler was cleared away by Sevmour's confession. The girl lived alone in a tiny cabin in the heart of (he Apache stronghold. She was studying Indian life at close range and associated freely with the young braves. For a time it was thought she had pried into sacred secrets of the tribe and had bepn kiiled in revenge. Seymour, according to this confession, did not know Miss Sehmerler well. He only talked to her a few times, he said, prior to asking permission to take her to a reservation dance. PRICE, Nov. 2. (U.PJ TWO were wounded, one serf-ously, early today in an unsuc- - Death GLOBE. con-tess- cessful jail delivery attempt in the Porous Carbon county jail. Sheriff S. M. Bliss was shot, in the right arm and chest h.s Deputy J. E. Gibson, ' WU awakened from a nap to receive a severe beating about the1 head. The sheriffs arm to save his life. ed Carol Simon, son of an Oklahoma 'oil magnate, told her she was to beautiful to become a mother and left her a month before their daughter was born, Mrs. Simon, shown above, told a San Francisco divorce judge. She was awarded $40 a month, pending trial of the case. NEWTON Mrs. Maren Sorenson Hansen, 93, widow of An- LOS ANGELES, Nov. 2 Two bandits held up B. J. An- derson, wholesale jeweler today, and escaped with platinum jewelry valued at approximately $60,000- - GOLS TO JAIL LOS ANGELES, Nov. 2 Don Moyle, Los Angeles, U P jail or glory aviator, surrendered and at the county jail today started serving a 30 day sentence on charges of driving while intoxicated. TO RECEIVE LIST WASHINGTON, Nov- 2 (UP) President Hoover received late - today from the navy league a list of its entire membership from which he will select representatives on his naval policy investigating committee. rp rp rp rp Medical CANTON, O., Nov. 2 9 P' The Rev. William A Sunday has opened another sizzling evange- m this town verbal fneworks 20 years ago. Capacity crowds heard him yesterday as lie flung scripture and pulpit wise cracks of which these were typical: No nation was ever able to! hand God the hot end of a' poker There w ill be a lot of God- fear' ig men and women in Russia when Stalin and his cut- thi oats are .sizzling in hell. ' We re making money in the United States by the baskets full and going to hell by the trainload at excursion rates. We shudder for a generation when you have 'to look under the table to see if the women have any clothes on. If I were a judge, I would see a woman without children 40 fathoms in Hoboken before I would give her one cent of alimony. Sunday is planning no revival in Hoboken Crashes rp rp rp suddenly tilted earthward. Eye witnesses said the pilot seemed helpless, and the large ship plunged directly downward to crash with terrific force. Flames swept over the plane within a few second after it crashed. The terrific heat caused by the blazing fabric prevented rescue of the occupants from the cab in plane. When the flames subsided, the dead were so badly burned and mangied that iden campaign that gaped at his antics and Plane rNp Gibson was slumbering in his two men, whom Of- -. ficers identified as Frank Smith and Lee Diamenti, en-- s tered. , One man went into the jail and assured an incarcerated friend that everybody would be freed. The other attacked (Mb- son and quickly beat him into . iz unconsciousness. Scuffling and turmoil awakened Sheriff Bliss. .He entered the jail office room with the. remark: What the is going, on here Smith, according to officers,, swung around, took quick aim with a sawed off shot gun and fired. Bliss instinctively dodged and threw up his right hand. It was this gesture that probably saved his life. Almost the entire charge of shot entered his arm. As the officer collapsed, the two men, ran out of the jail, without their' accomplishing mission. Jail escapes or attempted de- -. liveries have occured at Carbon county jail at six week intervals s.nce the first of the year. A western-wid- e search for the. two men was in progress today. Authorities in neighboring states were notified of the murderous attack and advised to be on the lookout. chair when As list rp rp rVp rkp tification was difficult Deputy Coroner Huner Koontz of Snoqualmie took charge of the bod.es. Several hours passed follow.ng the crash before positive identification was pos-- ! II OUTSIDE FRIENDS ENTER JAIL .. - drew Hansen, died Saturday at her home in Newton of infirto advanced mities incident age. Mr. Hansen died 16 years ago. Mrs. Hansen was the only surviving member of her family in this country, three children having also preceeded her In death. Born in Denmark. December 15, 1837, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sorenson, Mrs. Hansen was married in her na-t.land. She immigrated to Utah 55 years ago, and came to Newton which has since been the family home. Funeral services will be held in the Newton ward chapel on Tuesdav at 1 p. m. Burial w'll ClT ALL LINES be in the Newton cemetery. OF y-- When society; Arthur Hoge, president of the Koge Liston and Ring company; Ray Sutherland and Harold De Spain, salesmen for a real estate firm and Pilot John Blum. Apparently in perfect working order as it left the Okanogan region where the five had been hunting, the plane passed over Snoqualmie pass on its way to Seattle when the nose Price Sheriffs Arm Amputated To Save Life -- A De-.pit- e d Young Apache Clears Up Mystery Of PENETANG, Ont., Nov. 2. Five men were burned (UP) to death here today when a fire broke out while they were sleeping in a cottage at the Ontario home for mental defectives. The names of four of them were given by the local police chief as: Allan McKinnon, Xavier John Downey, and a mar named Simmons. The fifth mans identity, and the addresses of the other four, were not learned immediately. Le-sal- Idaho Banks Turn Down Hoover Offer TWIN (U.P) FALLS. South Idaho, Nov. 2 Central Idaho's banks 25 institutions in Twin F'alls, Cassia, Minidoka, Jerome, Lincoln, Blaine and Gooding counties will not require assistance that might be offered by President Hoovers billion dol-- 1 lar national credit corporation. This has been decided at a meeting of the South Central Idaho Bankers association. A resolution passed by the asso-- ! elation heartily approved the presidents economic restorative measure. Ben Diefendorf, state commissible. sioner of finance, counselled the Rain and fog over the pass bankers to base their business were advanced as passible causes judgment on actual economic of the accident by several wit- -l conditions under their observanesses, but av.ation officials dis-- 1 tion rather than be swayed by counted such theories. misleading banking charts and Blum was known was an figures issued by large financial able pilot. ial concerns- - COMMl'NCATION they fled in an automo-b.-l- e from Price, the men cut main line telephone wires, at -very opportunity, in the hope 'bat this would checkmate ransmisaiun of reports of the attempted break. However, it was just this measure of the robbers that gave pursuing officers a clue as to their whereabouts. They are convinced that the gunmen are heading south towards Green River and that they intend to flee into Nevada or Arizona. Officers said there was no mention but what Diamenti and "mith were the two men who assaulted the officers. Both are mid to have police records. Tile irisoner th-- v wanted to release "as Ruggero Gmato. alias Ruf- ferio Gargula, 26 who is being ield in jarf pending trial on a nbberv charge. Gargula was wrested in Salt Lake as a sus-oe- ct in the robbery of Louis Roth stein Seattle jewelry salesman. in December. 1930. Inasmuch as the two men "ere hcavdv armed, pursuing 'oss.emen were to prepared hoot it out in event they are apprehended. , -- Scout Finance Group In Preston Tuesda; The Finance committee of the ache Valiev council. Boy route of America executive rmmittee, will meet Tuesday, 't 7 n. m. in the library build-te- e at Preston. A tentative budget to be pre-- 1 rented at a final meeting on, November 6 of the six stake presidencies, whose stakes . are'-iine Cache council area and', tee council executive committee;' The final council budget for 1932 will be adopted at the November 6 session. n ' |