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Show F WELCOME mi- - TO LOGAN, I UTAH AGGIES ouimsui j What Folks Say What is right on Monday cannot be so very wrong on Sunday. May. The Rev. Clarqnce With which are combined the Cache Valley Daily Herald, the Daily Herald and The Journal. Volume 22. LOGAN, UTAH, Number 223. SEPTEMBER SATURDAY, 26. 1 931. FIVE O'CLOCK EDITION Price 5 Cents. Inf3 By Arthur Brisbane (Copyright, CY m-- r JI - - 1931) (5y 5J 5J 5 dy 5y (5y dN dy dy Interesting People. PLflNlSALL higher m Smiles have blossomed Wall street ever since Mtonday, when it was discovered that Britains suspension of the gold standard was really a good as thing for the United States, well as Britain. UNITED DOCTOR RELIEF FOR Labor that objects to wage comreductions, may find some fort in the fact that a ten per Asks State Leaders To Join In New Drive wages- ST. LOUIS, Sept. 26 (UP) Gov. William H. Alfalfa Bill cent deduction may mean before long a one hundred per cent increase in general prosof with restoration perity. - Big industrialists know thatre-it is to their own interest to store wages, and raise them even higher. Evervbodv knows now that PROSPERITY DESURPLUS THE ON PENDS EARNINGS OF WORKERS AND BUY THEIR ABILITY TO WHAT THEY CREATE. Murray, the self-style- d Investigation Pushed As Clues Point To Murder included is Russia doing? o, Roxy, moving picture impres-sari- who will have charge of motion picture houses in New Yorks new Rockefeller city, to cost $250,000,000. Roxy, with five architects, interested meet in will in Rockefeller city, Berlin a special train sent from Moscow to show them new things in theater lighting and motion picture production that the Russians have developed, superior to our own work. Who would have thought that? day that an unidentified man, whose charred body was found in the rear seat of an automobile, had been murdered. The body was found in the rear seat of the car by Seely peoples governor of Oklahoma, today assumed the leadership in a campaign to provide employment for more than a million idle workers in 19 midwestern, southwestern and southern states. Ive got it all worked out to- - give every man and woman a job In Oklahoma and there are more than 75,000 of them and I invite the governors of the other states to cooperate with me in doing the same for their state, the degovernor clared. OBLIGATION OF Sylvan Needham Missionary Testimonial Is Planned testimonial for A farewell Sylvan E. Needham, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. S- E. Needham, will be held Sunday at 7:30 p. m. in the First ward chapel. Elder Needham has been called to fill an L. D. S. mission in Great Britain. Sylvan leaves October 4 for Salt Lake City where he will - attend the church missli'-- i school for two weeks. He will leave Salt Lake October 17, sailing from New York, October 23, on the George Washington for Liverpool, England. Elder Needham Is a former student of the B. Y. C. training school and the Junior high school and Is a graduate of the Logan high school where he was class secretary in his fresh- -, man year- On graduation from high school, he was awarded a gold pin for service rendered the school. He Is also a graduNEW EMPLOYES ate of the Logan L. D. S. semito add were urged Employers nary. hours emoloyes by shortening For two he attended the and to add approximately 20 Utah Stateyears college Agricultural men to more paytheir per cent where he was prominent in rolls at the prevailing wage music and art, being member a A scale. day, five-d- of the college Glee club the a week industrial program first year, and working for two for the duration of the emeryears as staff artist on the gency was urged. ' college yearbook. He The federal government was isBuzzer, a member of the Delta Nu urged to extend the operation fraternity. , , ,f of the Federal Land Bank act For a nurilWi?' '(it ''years Mr. to permit farmers to retain has worked at the their farms through more lib- Needham Jewelry store in spare eral loan terms. Secretary of Needham hours as engraver- decorator, Agriculture Arthur (M. (Hyde was petitioned to extend repay- and commercial artist. The testimonal program folment, of seed loans by farmers in the drouth section for one lows: instrumental duet, John P. Smith, Jr., and Stratford year. Smith; talk, E. J. Passey; inPREMIUMS AVAILABLE SOON strumental trio, Harrison Farr, The premiums given for var- Mrs. Phyllis T. Spicker and Mrs. ious displays at the recent Walter Welti; remarks, Bishop Cache county fair will be mail- William Worley; vocal duet, I. ed out sometime next week, B. Holman and Mrs. Mabel HolSecretary M. R. Hovey of the man Godfrey; remarks, Sylvan Cache County Fair association E. Needham, Jr. announced Saturday morning. six-ho- It is charming to see Japan, politely drawing in her breath with oriental politeness, saying to the League of Nations you attend to your business and I shall attend to mine. Brigadier General Reilly, of the United States Reserve corps, informs you that in time of war, the Japanese prime minister, foreign secretary, the war and navy secretaries, become dummies. The chiefs of staffs in the army and navy deal directly with the emperor and go straight to him. In this little trouble, if they metaphorically banging their heads on the floor at the Mikados feet, say "we wish to win this war try the virtue of the emperor they can go ahead NATIONAL LEAGUE and win it. while the league 020 01 looks on. Their government" St. Louis 000 00 Cincinnati has nothing to say. Batteries: Hallahan and Wilson; Benton and Asby, Man-cus- - vs BASEBALL Hyrum Stake Conference On Tonight Cut Checks To Pay Milk Association of one per cent from the milk ehecks ' (5y dy rCp rp cp p of members of the Milk Marketing association of Cache county will be made by milk condensates beginning October 20 on Milk contract payments. This assurance was given by the milk factory heads to officers of the association when the twV groups met Friday, according to County Agricultural Agent R. L. Wrigley. The deduction will be made as a means of supplying revenue for the association to carry on its work. A better cooperation between both eroups is expected to result from the association's activity that wrill b highly beneficial to the milk industry n Cache valley. Maybe More Dads Should Do The Same The- - Hyrum Stake quarterly conference will vene Saturday evening, at the AMERICAN LEAGUE ward chapel. First game: Hyrum Third 2 Meetings will be held Saturday Washington.... 101 000 0002 7 COO 8 0 121 30x 7 New York night at 7:30, Sunday morning Batteries: Hadley. Marberry, at 10 a. m., and at 2 p. m. The meeting Sundav evening Fischer, Weaver and Spencer; will be under the auspices of Gomez and Dickey. 010 200 Detroit the Mutual Improvement asso500 100 ciation. Who is to be present Cleveland Batteries: Bridges and Ruel; to represent the presiding auFerrell and Sewell. thorities was not known by the First game: stake presidency late Friday. 300 000 10 A large attendance is expected Chicago 11 002 00 St. Louis and desired by the stake auBatteries: Thomas. Lyons and thorities. Tate; Cooney and Bengough. at Boston Philadelphia, UNION MEETING doubleheader called off, rain. Union meeting of the Logan will be Stake Relief FOOTBALL SCORE held Sunday Society afternoon at 2 oclock in tb.e stake house. All 22 officers, and class leaders and Utah Aggies agents are requested 0 magazine Montana Mines to be present. con- STABBED MEMPHIS, Tenn., Sept 26. (UP) Dr. J. C. Cash King, prominent Memphis' physician, was stabbed Just below the heart allegedly by Hunter Wilson, lawyer and former attorney general of Tennessee in an argument at the doctor's office, today. ney Fred J. Munder of Suffolk county, N. J., emerged from a two-hoquestioning of Miss Leonora Muttert at police headquarters here today with the ur announcement that the latest lead in the strange slaying of of Snowville. The Benjamin P. Collings had colCutler machine was off the highway, lapsed. among the cedars about three miles east of Park Valley. IDLE DANGEROUS were promptly Authorities SALT LAKE CITY, Sept. 25. notified and an investigation was well under, way today to (CJ?) An appeal to introduce prison reform by giving him determine the mins identity. was ooportunity to remove idleness The murder theory was made before the Chamber strengthened by the posture of of Commerce last night by R. the body. It was found in the rear seat of the car, in a E. Davis, penitentiary warden. natural sitting position. No man. authorities claim, CHARGES FALSE could burn himself up afid still ; CHICAGO. Sept. 26. (UP) remain in a natural position Ignited States district attorney Officers are inclined to be- George E. Q. Johnson, leader of lieve that the suicide note left the governments fight against in a brief case near the car wass Chicago gangsters, today written by the murderer in the branded 'as false - charges - alacwould hope that authorities legedly manufactured by gangcept a suicide motive and aban- sters that a $75,000 bribe was to don further investigation. be passed to influence him to drop or temper his anti-cridrive. PUBLIC POWER VESSEL MISSING NORT TRURO, Mass., Sept. 26 (UP) Coast guards scanned the treacherous waters of Cape Cod today for a mystery ship which vanished in daylight yesterday as though swallowed by the sea. Mayor A. G. Lundstrom, Commissioner Olof I. Pedersen, and H. C. Maughan, superintendent of the Logan city power plant, returned Friday night from Provo where they attended the annual state meeting of the municipal league. Addresses were given by Congressman Don B. Colton, Governor George H. Dern, and others. The local officials attended two meetings of the league Friday. That community is fortunate which owns its own public utilities. Congressman Colton said in his address before the according to Mayor gathering, Lundstrom. 1. F. I PLANS SOCIAL SOON Cache Valleys newly organizthe Veterans of Foreign Wars, No. 2129, is sponsoring its first social next Wednesday evening at the Palais d Or. The general public is invited to attend. According to Horace Taylor ed post of the entertainment committee a big time is in store for all those who attend. The chairman of overseas atmosphere will be carried out with special decorations. The local post No. 2129, including members from all parts of the valley, was organized last August. PROMISES TO PAY Deputy Sheriff N. C. Petersson was assured Saturday morning conversation in a telephone with the sheriff of Utah county at Provo that $20 will be obtained from G. W. Dagbell being held there. Dagbell is wanted in Cache county on a charge of having cashed a worthless check for $9 at a Logan service station on August 29. An $11 fine is attached to the claim of the Cache county sheriff for payment of the check. HOMECOMING The Homecoming program of the Fourth ward Primary will be given Monday evening at 7:30 oclock in the ward chapel. The program will consist of dance and song numbers by the children. Admission will be free. 01 MONDAY Outside Clubs Invited To Attend First Meeting Europe will be the theme discussed at the first dinner of the season of the Logan Business and Professional Womens club Monday at 7 p. m. at the Bluebird. Miss Elizabeth Fitzgerald and Miss Elizabeth Bonner of the Salt Lake club will be in attendance. A special invitation is being extended to members of the B. P. W- - clubs In Preston and Brigham City to attend the dinner gathering here, Mrs. Mary Carter of the local club announced Saturday morning. Miss Fitzgerald, who with 22 Business and Profesional Womens club members from 14 states on a tour of Europe last summer will be the speaker. They visited eight countries during their stay abroad, and spent one week in Vienna at the International Congress of Business and Professional Women to ..which Miss Fitzgerald was one of the delegates from the United States. The dinner Monday night will toe in charge of the International Relations dommittee of the local club. Miss Margery Frink is chairman and other members are the Misses Manilla Curtis, Ruth Stewart and Ann Peterson. MrsBlanche C. Pittman Is president of the local club this year. The membership to date approximates 5d.v - W. C. T. U, MEETING It Happened This Way At Stony Ford STONY FORD, Ariz., Sept. Twenty men went to work today on the Stony Ford Southern railway, straightening out the line, bent yesterday in a freak spell. Hot sunshine from, a cloudy sky shone on one side of the track but not the other. This caused the north side rails to expand, while the south side metal stayed where it was. The consequence was that the track slowly curved, until finally the Stony Ford end was two miles out in the desert and Engineer Bill MeConaughey almost ran tne local off the end of A A special meeting of the local Womens Christian Temperance Union wdll be held Tuesday. September 29. at 7:45 p. m. in Westminster Hall of the Presby-eria- n church. Mrs. W. D. Jenkins of Tremontou. state president, will be the speaker. All vomen of Logan are urged to attend the gathering. 4 26. ld o. HYRUM PRESS LEAD COLLAPSES JERSEY CITY, N. J., Soot 26 26. (UP) Assistant District Attor- BRIGHAM CITY, Sept. . (UP) The belief grew here to- An interesting load of Amerilast cans sailed on the Bremen KetTuesday. Chief Engineer distering, of General Motors, said cussing flying accidents, the men should fly only when fly-- t' Jt) birds fly. They have beenvears, of fng for many millionsnot fly at and know. They do very night, nor in a fog, or in hpavy wind, any longerandthan it GOVERNMENT stop takes them to land It is as much the obligaflying.' tion of the governments, citv, W, S. Knudsen, also of Gento eral Motors, and president of county, state and federal in his take care of their citizens the Chevrolet company, on Motors distress as it is of the taxpayer way to inspect General where he to pay his taxes, Murray told plants in Denmark, was born, in Sweden. Germany, 150 delegates from 12 of the etc., thinks the world is fairly 19 states invited to send representatives. cheerful. Resolutions adopted by the He had just called on the able Swift Brothers in Chica- conference and containing Gov. go, to thank them for ordering Murrays proposals included the one thousand Chevrolet trucks immediate speeding up of all at one time ,and look over their government work on flood control, public buildings and road plant. He learned that in depression construction. 'limes people eat as much meat The conference recommended as ever, for the reason that the governors of the various without states appoint county chairmen they cant get along it. But they eat more of the l.o cooperate with city. county, most costly meat. state and federal officials In One group of passengers in- providing employment. what ask teresting those that URGED TO 4DD j dy dy dy Cy dy from the . lf dy 5y dN Flashes On Tuesday, wage reductions were announced by big corporwent ations. Yesterday, stocks railroads up in Wall Street, were especially buoyant, important industrials cheerful and one-ha- dN Alfalfa Bill Leads Campaign To Aid Jobless Smiles Come Back. Fly, Only, When Birds Fly. Deduction of dV the track. Buses were used to transport the passengers from the new railhead to town.' DIVORCE . ASKED Ellen L. Bischoff filed suit Friday in first district court for a decree of divorce from Samuel Hornsby Bischoff on grounds of desertion. She asks, in addition to the decree, $50 monthly alimony for herself and a minor child, attorney's fees, and title to property held in the husbands name in Ogden. UNDER INDICTMENT NEW YORK, Sept. 26. (UP) Palmer Canfield. influential York Republican who formerly served as federal prohibition administrator here, mayor of Kingston, N. Y., and a dry adviser to the Wickersham law enforcement commission, was under indictment today on charges of grand larceny and forgery. New BALTIMORE. Md., Sept. (UP) Faithful to a pledge made before Judge O'Dunne, a father, (2, but husky, last n:ght gave an licking to his sons, one 17 and the other 27. The boys were arrested on a bookmaking charge. Before Judge ODunne yesterday they were offered the choice of ten days in jail or a $100 fine each. The younger brother is James A Schap, and the elder Is Peter. Their sister, Mrs. Agnes Kaufman, pleaded for ;ne her fathers boys, citing years and record for up26 rightness. Ill let them loose, said And you Judge ODunne, can take them home if you can guarantee they will get a licking. They got it. Pop Schap took them out In the back yard. In his hand was a strap. The boys genuflected in humble obedience. Each took five lashes, and the old man made them like it. Letters over the signature of members of the condemnation board of Logan city were mailed out Saturday asking William Bowen, Weston Vernon and Sidney O. Stevens, acting for the Sidney Stevens Implement company of Ogden, owners of property in Logan, to appear before the board for a hearing October 6 at 10 a. m., in the city commission room of the Arimo block. The purpose of the session is to take testimony as to why Logan city should or should not condemn certain buildings in the rear of the vacant Sidney Stevens building on Center street and order their removal for public health and safety. Likewise the frame building on First West street between Center street and First North streets, formerly used as a livery stable, and a frame structure in the rear of the L. D. on College Hill will be ordered removed unless suitable reasons are given at the hearing as to why the step should not be taken. Fire Chief C. W. Rapp, Building Inspector C. T. Barrett, and Health Officer William Walton condemnation the comprise board. OUT ON BOND to Mr. Keveren. The Keverens left Logan in November, 1930, sailing for the Hawaiian Islands on the Cali-wa- ii from the port of I os Angeles. Elder David England, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. England, of Logan, was also on the boat. They docked at Honolulu November 15, 1930. and were sent direct to Laie. When they arrived In Hawaii, 50 L. D. S. missionaries were laboring among the Polynesians. There are now only 34. Elders Hervin B. Nielsen of Hyrum and W. H. Kowallis of River Heights are district presidents of the Hawaiian mission. Elder England is acting mission and Elder Eugene secretary, Bell, also of Logan. Is considered the best linguist in speaking the native language, of all Columbus Day, Oct. 12 Set For Showing Of Marker The discovery of Cache valley In the fall of 1884 will be honored by the unveiling and dedication of a marker at the tabernacle grounds in Logan on Monday, October 12. The Logan City Welfare committee made this announcement Saturday through M. R. Hovey, secretary of the Logan Chamber of Commerce. The committee has been working with the Utah Pioneer Trails and Landmarks association in placing the marker. It Is one of a series which are being erected through Utah by the association. Secretary 'John D. Giles ol the association and other officials will be special guests at the unveiling and dedication exercises. It is believed that the date selected, which la also Columbus day, is particularly fitting lor. the. occasion. The atone base and marker have been taken from Blacksmith Fork canyon by William Brown, local stone cutter. They will be erected within a few days but the bronze tablet will not be placed until nearly October 12. The tablet is made of Utah copper and measures 22 by 24 Inches. It will have the following Inscription: No. 2 1931 Willow Valley (as this region was known to the Indians) was CACHE VALLEY by fur trappers and traders In the winter of 1825-2- 6 James Bfldger led the first trappers to a winter encampment near here In 1824; and towards December 1825, William L. Sublette, in charge of General William H. Ashley's Mountain Men, ordered many of the 1825 seasons furs cached (hidden, probably by burying), in this vicinity, before moving to winter rendezvous at the Junction of the Ogden and Weber rivers. Fur trappers and traders in- terested in the furs thus stored here to await General Ashleys merchandise caravan of 1826, and similar caravans in subsequent years were William L. Sublette, James Bridger, Jede-diS. Smith, Thomas Fitzpatrick, Etienne Provot, Robert Campbell, James P. Beckworth, z, David E. Jackson Louis Jean Baptiste Gervais, Moses Harris and many others. Erected by Utah Pioneer Trails and Landmarks Association ah Vas-que- Mondell Anderson, charged with drunkenness while driving an automobile, was released from the county jail Saturday and morning after a bond of $500 had been given in his behalf to Welfare Committee City Logan City Judge Jesse P. Rich. Anderson will appear in city court Monday at 2 p. m. to plead to the charge. Many Local Boys Are Prominent In Hawaiian Mission Says E. J. Keveren Unless a workman can live on poi a Polynesian food, or a ukelele, he had better stay a wav from Hawaii for awhile if he is looking for a job." This was the comment of E. J. Keveren, former manager of the Cache Knitting factory following his return Monday from Hawaii where he has been with his wife and son. Kenwood, filling an L. D. S. mission since November, 1930. The Keverens returned home on account of Mrs. Keverens ill health. While in the mission field, Mr. Keveren had charge of the beautiful L.D.S. temple grounds at Laie, Oahu, Hawaii. He also officiated in temple ceremonies. The temple is one of the foremost show places for tourists going to the islands, according UNVEILING. the LD.S. missionaries laboring in the Hawaiian field, Mr. Keveren reports. Tourist, trade in Hawaii has fallen off considerably the last . year, Mr. Keveren Hawaii has one of the largest United States naval bases located at Pearl harbor. Besides the naval force, there are about soldiers sta20,000 American tioned on the islands. Intermarriage of the Hawaiian natives with peoole of other races who have flocked to the islands has cut down the native stock to about 20 noo now. says The Japanese Mr. Keveren. inhabitants of the islands are the mast aggressive in business enterprises there. Mr. Keveren considers remarked, and he In them most conscientious thqir habits and ways of life. NEW YORK, Sept. 26. 6i.R) The stock market held within a narrow range through most ol the session and then slid off near the close to end the day at slightly lower was exerted against a few individual issues. American Telephone dropped about four points from its high, while Coca Cola was driven to a new low for the bear movement with a loss of more than 4 points. International match preferred and Kreuger & Toll were driven to new lows- levels-Pressur- e FIRE PREVENTION MEET Chairman O. A- - Garff of the fire prevention committee of the Logan Chamber of Commerce, met Saturday morning with members of the committee to lav plans for this seasons activity. Lloyd Theurer, clerk school of the Cache county board, has been made a member of the committee to succeed Lyman D. Pedersen, former clerk of the school board. |