OCR Text |
Show 4 The Todays News Germanys Mussolini outlines his plans for conquest Page one, column eight. Volume 22. LOGAN, UTAH. MON DAY. DEC rT TQOUQ HOOVER i UOrlljiJ Today dj By Arthur Brisbane (Copyright, - Dec. 21. PHILADELPHIA, (UP i Christmas radio programs sponsored by adver- Diamond last Jack At Legs Is really dead, and New York, tisers are turning Christmas balcaro.s into lyhoo, in the opinion of Dr. David M. Steele, rector of the Protestant Episcopal Church of St. Luke and the Epiphany. Dr. Steele denounced the practice in his sermon yesterday. Once, so it was reported, there were angel voices in the sky, he said. Now' what goes on in those far reaches, what are the resounding where he worked and throve, Tne jusremarks cynically, tice of the underworld is in working order even if the justice of the upper world misses fire occasionally. i P hair-restor- "Legs Diamond, oootlegger, beer runner, racketeer, shot several times, carrying at least ten bullets in his body, was convicted more than twenty times, each time escaping the rap." He wriggled liom the clutches of justice again on Thursday. That night he had a party to celebrate his escape from the latest rap. Late in the night, when the came anparty was over', there one he did other rap" and that not escape. One bullet fired through his head, and two into ins face as he lay in bed, silenced him . forever. It was a cruel, murder. Oangsters explain it briefly. "He was a double crosser, and what he got was too good for him. That picture of our crime situation should interest prohisince prohibition bitionists, alone makes possible Jack Dialike thousands the mond and . . him, AFTER NOON Tax payments totaling or 65 per cent of the total $888,000 to be collected on the property levy in Cache county had been collected up to Saturday night at the office of Treasurer E. N. Maughan. Last minute taxpayers rushed to the office of the county treasurer at the courthouse Mon day morning to make their payments before the books are closed, and delinquencies are declaredEarly Monday morning remained to be collected on 1931 notices. A check for approximately $30,000 covering taxes on property Cache in county of holdings the Utah Idaho Central railroad was expected Monday. One from the Oregon Short Line railroad company for $59,908.32 was received several days ago-ThAmalgamated Sulllfomp-any- s check was received Friday. Payment of $50,000 in taxes marked the heaviest days rethe county ceipts Saturday treasurer has experienced this year. The next task of the treasurer and his office force is to make ready for printing the delinquent tax list. This will be ready for publication Monday or Tuesday, Jan. 4 or 5, Mr. Maughan said Monday morning. $576,-724.1- 1, gs Germany. The French republic that will to not permit any pretendant on the French throne to live an emperor in another country, restoring such a line as the soil, is truly Hapsburgs especially, as though the interesting. It isshould underUnited States take to restore the empire of Mexico. New York and New Jersey combined to build a tunnel connecting Manhattan Island with enthe American continent, undrive abling automobiles toNew Jersey der the river from to New York. Recently, an automobile driver, paying fifty cents, received tunnel ticket No. 5,000,000. The traffic has already paid for the tunnel, supplying money for another tunnel. FOB VALLEY 5 2 1. 10.11. -- FIVE OCLOCK EDITION Price LiiiNO d $311,-275.- retary Hovey. DEBT DELAY Senate Group Guests At Breakfast At White House Cache county school district debt to Supt 2 budget on which the schools are now operating totals $333,-Ja- nt 097. Disbursements for September and November, the first three months of school opera- schedule tion on the 1931-3totaled $103,117.66. Expenditures during December are expected to aggregate $30,000. This will leave, a balance in the school to carry the treasury of $200-50svstem through its expenses for the remaining six months of the school year. All departments are keeping within budget layouts except th-- t of transnortation which will run slightly over the schedule. according to Mr. Kirkbnri. Annropriatlons from other departments, It is , expected, will cover the deficit which the i 2 transportation department I goodpossib.lit.es, HUS es pti DENVER? 2L-Thirtfeen men wljo muted a poison Idaho and Wyoming should out northern Colorado, themjointly undertake the expense selves were the victims of the of an investigation to accuratepoison. The 13 suffered arsenly determine the water storage ic poisoning from inhalin possibilities of Bear River, a fumes of the arsenic placed in walerw'ay which passes through the mash to kill grasshoppers. each state. This suggestion, made by Dr. AGAINST BANDITS Elwood Mead, commissioner of Dec. MUKDEN. Manchuria, it reclamation, will be considered 21. (i ci Japans Wednesday at the water campaign began in Manchuria, storage commission meeting today as a prelude to a southnext Wednesday. ward drive toward Chinchow. Dr. Mead's proposal was made A battle was expected between in answer to a query from John lone Japanese batallion and Whiting, Wyoming state 000 Chinese irregulais. engineer. Dec. 21. WASHINGTON, Hoover carried his battle lor immediate action on his economic program to the senate today. At a breakfast conference to which he sum- moned leaders of both parties he reiterated his plea for nonpartisan action at once on the moratorium, the Federal Land bank legislation and the reconstruction finance corporation. The president urged cooperation on this program in the senate as he had urged it at a similar breakfast for leaders STILL MISSING of the house left Friday. Pi : CINCINNATI, Dec. 21. The farm loan and the fiMarian McLean, 6, still Was nance corporation legislation missing from her home here should be out of committee bv search of Four days today. reconvening of congress that yielded nothing had al- - latter the holiday recess. Wal-moshe that destroyed hope er Newton, secretary to the ever would be found. nresident said. That, of course, is anticipating that the long BLAST BANK recess is to be taken as or.gi-- 1 LOS ANGELES, Dec. 2.. 'll1 nallv nlanned. Several thousand dollars was Newton said there was a slim obtained early today by bapk possibility that congress in view bandits who crawled through of pressing financial legisla- a sewer and dynamited the uon vould alter its plan and bottom from the vault of u Se- - not tage the long recess. National cunty-Firbankj 'mere Is practically no Newton said afj ior opposition. the ter "to the morabreakfast, . BANK CLOSED would torium go through today CLEVELAND, O.. Dec. 21. 4JPJ or tomorrow. Newton said -- The Standard Trust bank, The guests at the presiden- originally the Brotherhood of tjaj breakfast Included' Engineers tors srn0)t,- Repn., and King erative National bank, when its )em " Utah. J six branches, was taken over! quietly by the state banking de- - IvHDDlt inClS partment today for liquidation. anti-band- i DiSTRIRRTEQ Special districts in which permits to cut timber on the Cache' national forest will be designated beginning January 1, Supervisor Carl B Arensen said Monday morning. The plan is not to curtail per-ha- s mits. for timber cutting, he said, but rather to localize the areas over which the timber may be cut. As a safeguard for the streams, beds and channels, the forest office will not issue per-Ponuts for Umber cutting on areas other than those designated til the timber supply has been cleaned from a specific seetion. Tnen others will be open-an- d : na ry ed Timber cutting in the Cache valley section of the Cache forest is confined now largely to maple Little preference for quaking aspen has been shown so far, Supervisor Arentsen said. The heat value of maple for firewood is. twice as great as that of aspen, he abserved. On the Logan canyon range of the Cache forest, large stands of quaking aspen are found near Tony Grove and above the dugMr. way' toward the divide, .Arentson said. ' ' ALL REPARATIONS He received me at his head- Surviving are her husband, three sons and one daughter, George M J. Leigh, and Oliver Wilkinson, and Mrs. Sarah L. Parkinson. Ml ol Loean. The following brothers and sisters Edward JSmith, survive Fianklin Idaho: Mrs Julia Iolmes, Dixon, Wyo.; Mrs. Eli nice J Gordon, San Francisco; Joseph J Smith. Mrs. Letitla Mrs. and Jones, Margaret Iinwkes. all of Logan. ' j st Co-O- p- - Hunt no "parole In Death From Gun OLYMPLA, Wash. Dec. 21. 'l Governor Roland Hartley will T FMONTON Dec 21 iUP-- A Iler- not parole mission of chanty had ended bert Niecolis, of Star, Idaho, in tragedv todiv as funeral ser slayer of John Worel veteran vices were hein prepared f" Asotin, .Wash, sheriff, to Fa- I eland Baek. 27. aeeidentallv ther E. J. Flanigan, nationally-know- n 'hot ond fatil'v wounded director of a home for Hansel valley late Sunday Berk had been on a rabbo wayward boys at Omaha, Neb. l . hunt to secure ineat for the HEARING WASHINGTON, Dee 21 (UPi Senator Clarence C. Dill, Dem.. emolovcd He leaned lus gun a n"(,iat the rear bumper of car While taking off his coat "-garment brushed against Wash., today requested an oral hearing on the army board ot the weanon and discharged it engineers report which rejected The full charge struck Beck the Grand Coulee Dam project lust below the heart He died two hours later. i in Washington. i WASHINGTON, Dec. 21. (t'.ii The bnnons of dollars which American bankers loaned for-lg- n countries In the post-wera of money lending are represented now by bonds in the hands of American investors and not owned by the bankers, Otto Kahn told the senate fl- ar nance committee foreign loan today. Most of thp bonds have de- heavily In value. Kahn, head of Kahn. Loeb tnd company, was called to describe the financing opera- tions of his company m the foreign fields. He declined to express an opinion of reduction of debtsowed the United States government by foreign governments. Bankers, he said, are trying to divest themselves of their banking prejudices, in these t.mes of hardship. If we are asked for advice we will give it, I am sure, as American citizens. ' Santa Comes Early, Seven Die As Boy Coasts MUSKEGOAN, Mich. Dec. 21 climaxed his plea for the shiny Oman, both 33, watched from 'UP) A little child led his par - .new sled he knew was to be the door of their house nearby, ents, his brouierj an,i three his Christmas day. There was a warning crack! others to their death yesterday The ice is melting, Ma. It of ice. The boy screamed in when he glided across the treach- - will be gone by Christmas fright, and plunged a second cons lee of Errgang Lake on She nodded her head in assent later into a gaping pole, 50 feet Christmas sled wheedled out of end thp hanpv, laughing yoting-Sant- a from shore. Claus six days ahead of ster skipped to the lake shore The father, Albert Oman, 33, schedule. .and dasiied himself and sled on followed by the mother, heedless Just a half hour before the the two inch ice for a good old of danger, raced over the ice sun dropped behind the tall belly buster " toward the struggling figure. tree tops, lining the lake 35 Out he skimmed, a mile a, Ten feet from his goal. Oman miles northeast of here, seven '.minute it seemed The smiling too, fell through the lee. His had parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert 'wife plunged through near him, iyear old Orval Oman ' i j Harry Errgang. 29. who lived w.itr and tried near the Omans, walked to the mother. edge of the cracking ice and dived to save his sister. and 17, Fred, Teddy Morgan, with Errgang, 14, who lived more carefully on the someone. ice, trying to save fell m ten feet from shore, Oliver, 12, brother of Orval, rushed up, evaded frantic et- forts of his aunt, Mrs. Martha Morgan, whose own two boys now Were struggling in the icy to swim to his Realizing she was the only adult for more than a mile around. Mrs Morgan ran headed to the home of Carl Franke. tormer township super-The- v visor, for help. Even before she was out of sight, the last of the seven in the tiny lake was still Only Glora. 3. remains alive of the Oman family. bare-walk- rt WOUUSTOTOID 1897. st E CULL Mrs. Angeline Johns Smith Wilkinson. 55, wife of Fred Wilkinson, manager of Wilkinson & Sons, book stationery dealers, died Soon after 8 p. m. Sunday at a local hospital. Mrs. Wilkinson had been ill for a number of years suffering from asthma-Shhad been severely ill for . sp.vejalmcinths. Funeral arrangements' have not been made. The Lindquist Funeral home is handling arrangements March 23, 1876, Born in a daughter of Edward W. and Ann Johns Sm.th, Mrs. Wtl- in Logan all her .'ison Her father was a native fe( ui Engi.tnd, aiiu ner motner a native of Wales. Mr. and Mrs. Wilkinson were married m Logan January 14. 7,-- FOREST AREA TO I sought out Hitler first as the man of whom world attention naturally centers when Germany is under discussion. All travelers to Germany from any part of the world are curious above all about Hitler, what sort of man he Is, whence he drives his undeniable power, what are his aims, what the prospects of his assuming the leadership of Germany are, and how h's drastic program for Germany's future is received by the Germans Not by his compatriots, for strangely enough,. Hitler is an Alien, en Austrian who has never been denied German citizenship. Even in a preliminary view of the German scene, it was manifest everywhere that the belligerent Fascist leader, with his policy of intense nationalism, Is obtaining adherents by the thousands, regardless of his apparently extravagant claims. Hitler, who confidently . ex-pects to become the ruler of Germany within a lew months, and who although he. is not even a German Citizen, claims-suppoof 15,000,000 German voters, Is supreme commander of the vast, unarmed Fascist army. gov- by foreign nations. Senator Johnson, Repn., of the leading opponent maratorium, objected to the program of Republican leaders to keep the senate in night session to ratify the debt holiday before adjournment for Christmas. I insist that we shall be heard, sir, and shall not be put to the physical test this night session program would provide. I want to present to the men with wasted bodie who are tramping the streets the fact that we are to make a gift of $252,000,000 to conn-triwhich are able to pay. All over the land our people are crying to us for aid and we will sit all night long to put on the hacks of our own people the burden owed to ns by foreign nations." mash last summer with which will WORLD ATTENTION involving this owed ernment SALT LAKE CITY, Dec. 21 to kill the millions of grass(UP) The three states of Utah, hoppers that swarmed through incur, he said. Bond payments of $25,000 and interest on bonds totaling $10 224 will be met before the end of this school year. There is a reserve for uncollected revenue totaling $18,000. Supt. Kirkbride announced the school system balance on December 1 was $230,579. moratorium $252,000,000 te is keeping within bounds of its cross-sectio- BY LYLE C. WILSON Dec. 21. WASHINGTON. (U Pi The senate at 1:50 p. m. today began consideration of the resolution to ratify the only year Hoover 75-fo- ot 1931-3- Copyright 1931 by United Press Munich. Germany, Dec. 21. 'i i'' Adolph Hitler, leader of an army of 200.000 picked men sworn to obey him, proclaimed today that when he comes to power in Germany which he confidently predicts he will do within a few months he will tell the world that Germany can no longer pay reparations. Such a threat, made in an exclusive United Press interview with the man universally regarded as the rising Mussolini of Germany, was the first and most striking impression the correspondent received on a tour through the main centers of the country, seeking a n of German thought and activity. IS CENTER OF THE GUN BATTLE FATAL CHICAGO, Dec. 21. a is Detectives James J. Caplis was FORMER CACHE he-m- BY WEBB MILLER killed, and a girl was wounded, when four shotgun bandits "burst in upon the dancers in Bear River has few possibili- a crowded northside cafe today ties lor water storage as far and were routed in a spectacu--la- r battle. as Cache Valley is concerned, according to Director .William PATROL WATER. Peterson of the USAC extension SAN Dec. 21 I RANCISCO, service and a member of the Utah State Water Storage com- tUPi Coast guard cutters patrolled the rough waters off mission. The .statement was made in Rockaway beach today in search answer to a query from the of a fisherman missing after a Herald-Journon a proposed fire at sea which destroyed the trawler Abraham Lincinvestigation by Utah, Idaho and Wyoming, of the water oln. storage possibilities of the river. SHOTGUN DEATIL The proposal wras suggested by SODA SPRINGS, Wyo Dec. 21 U. S. Dr. Elwood Mead of Reclamation service and will be (UP) Funeral services were beacted upon by the Utah com- ing arranged today for Alvin mission next Wednesday. Laigilhere, 15, victim of a gun Director Peterson was reluct- - accident when a loaded revolver to issue a statement before discharged. the meeting but explained that CLAIMS LIFE. athe present time, he SALT LAKE CITY, Dec. 21 lieved the Bear River offered carbon monoxide little water storage possibilities (UP)hadDeadly claimed another life toin Cache Valley. He added how- gas with the death Sunday of ever, that local tributaries to day, Snarr, bank teller the river including the Logan D. and Little Bear Rivers have BE Add to the already multiple duties and offices of of the Logan Chamber Comerce that of a matrimonial bureau. According to Secretary M. R. Hovey, the chamber has iust received a letter from Miss Juanita Repder of St. Joe. Missouri, asking for a lifes companion. A little grey home in the west with a great big westo help her tern occupy it is Miss Reeders best wish. A great chance lor some western Romeo," livers Sec- - al Moving day started Monday It would be a good thing for morning at the Cache Valley all cities and states if they Boy Scout council headquar- would spend more of their inters. money on improvements to crease values and MAKE MON- - PROVIDENCE Word has been The council executive board EY, and less for the benefit cf received here of the death in completed negotiations for Ogden Saturday of Charles J. new quarters for the scout of- politicians. Mr, Peterson is a lice staff on the northeast sec- Peterson. farmer living in Tremonton tion of the Cache library Railroads, a little late, but but was formerly of Providence. basement at Firstcounty North and better late than never, decide Mr. Peterson was taken to an First East streets. to deliver freight at the store Ogden hospital several weeks Scout Executive Preston W. there it also up pick door," an ago where he underwent said the scout office will and take ic to 4he railroad. but failed to recover. occupy the large room in the Little by little, the railroads operation Funeral services will be held basement with entrance have lost then short haul busi-res- Tuesday at 1 p. m. at Tremon- on side of the build- north the automoto over it turning ton. Interment will also be ing. The quarters are spacious, that bile haulers, freight at Tremonton. there is ample loom for a COULD pick up and deliver." Mr. Peterson is survived by counter partitions to ac- The railroad will get back much his widow', Mrs. Rose Cherketts comodate and the private office of what they lost if they will Peterson, a native of Proviof the Executive equipment turn to lighter transportation dence and the following chil- Pond, a storeroom, special com- . units, higher passenger speed, dreri all of iremonton. Mrs. mlttee rooms and the general and modern freight service. Mrs. Lose' office of the council. Lottie Macombs, Meanwhile, this country, for its own sake, must see that the ElmaBerntofand11 Rom iPeter- - ij The Cache county library and boarcj an(j fhe scout council railroads are protected, heads have agreed to an ar have public support. They are rangement whereby the quar- the veins and arteries of the ters have been rented for a United States, not to be trifled C. C. TAKES ON small fee. The change is con- with, or neglected. sidered a timely and effertlve NEW DUTY AS time, Executive CUPID AGENT; Pond asaidthlS .GippfMG' Militant Leader Plana Big- Program For Nation Great Falls has been appointed Shouse, executive of the Democratic national committee, as chairman of the Montana victory campaign committee. To Decide Cents. To Drop Reparations He Is In Control IS APPOINTED GREAT FALLS. Mont., Dec. 21. urn John E. Dawson of Director Peterson And State Commission 5 KTC; Hitler Says Germany A Jouett ARF SMALL bychairman s, 'H d d Kit UNITED PRESS echoes of the ethers wave lengths? "Last night, while I listened in for five minutes, I heard Holy Night, Silent Night used to introduce a hair restorer Come, all ye Faithful, was sung on behalf of a beauty shoppe. "Miltons hymn to nativity was sung to promote the sale of a new model automobile. and 'Hark, the Herald Angeles Sing was the pre ude to the announcement of an undertaker's parlor I ask you We have seen His star, but wheie is He? 1931 budget, according I. W. Kirkbride. The . French 5j 11 PT 1 IKOM DELINQUENT News from France is VERY said to interesting. Briandof isconditions plan restoration as far as posm central Europe sible as they were before the war. He would put the back on the throne of Austria, thus shutting out any possibility of a combination with Haps-bur- 5 CACHE TAXES cold-blood- ed f' 5j J Ballyhoo Improve. T$ 5y KM (Sear Kiver Rafter Survey Radio Turns Christmas flashes Carols Into Iflo Jack Diamond's Last Rap. To Restore llapsburftx. It Pays 5y The blooming of art and knowledge spiritualizes mans Nicholas Roeindividuality rich. With which are combined the Cache Valley Daily Herald, the Daily Herald and The Journal Number 207. f Journal HeraiM What Folks Say ed quarters in the famous brown house of Munich after three davs of waiting. house The former Austrian painter,' ever the actot, spoke in vehement tones. With flash -Ing eyes and tense gestures. My personal belief. he said, is that if the world is sensible. it will suspend reparations tomorrow to avert the ruin of the entire world economic system. The profits from reparations to have brought prosperity France, but the ruin bf the German economic system will go around the world. I predicted the present situation years ago but I was howled down by the press. They said Owen D. Young (American author ol the Young Plan) must know mere about banking than' Hitler. Now they have found that Young was wrong and Hitler was right. If I were in power, I would tell the world that Germany cannot pay reparations. I would tell the world the facts and let the world Investigate. Hitler appealed elated ot the Washington Investigation of international bankers foreign loans, because hostility to the of international loaning capital js one of the pet articles of the or Nazi, Fascist, faith, International finance, ler said, has ignored the most primitive laws for its preser-preriatvation. The loaning of money from America to Germany is ed (roiuiii'icii o' i"o) in Prlces m0ved Irregularly lethargic trading - on thestock exchange today. Many traders were absent for a prolonged vacation over Christmas holiday and business generally was only of routine character in banks and brokerage houses. For the most part charges in stock prices were narrow. Lut for a time in the afternoon a fair rally developed. te Rain or snow and UTAH colder tonight; Tuesday unsettled. IDAHO Rains and snow to- dav. Generally fair tonight Maximum temperature Sunago, 23. j dav, 51; one year last Minimum temperature night, 20; one year ago, t. |