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Show Dear Santa Claus- 4 The - Volume 22. Number 280. Herald-Jouims- il With which are combined the Cache Valley Daily Herald, the Daily Herald and The Journal UTAII.TUESDAY, DECEMBER LOGAN, H),51. 1, mm f)rprpfprpfprprp Heres some good news for the youngsters of Cache Valley. The Herald-JournTuesday received a special wireless mes- at his Claus from Santa sage headquarters at the North Pole. Heres what he said: Things are so busy up here that I am afraid I will iDy Arthur Brisbane be unable to get to Logan before Christmas night. Ive (Copyright, 1031) heard a lot about depression but there isnt certainly any in this business. Since I wont be able to To Make a Good Picture. reach Logan, I am going to ask you at the Herald-Journoffice to art as headCow In Calf $20. quarters. Tell all the children of Logan and Cache Working, Not For Valley to address their letters to Santa Claus in care Money. of the Herald-Journa- l. Ill send a special messenger War Will Vanish. , down and pick them up sometime before Christmas. Please check up on the California-H- ere LOS ANGELES. children who send in letters in Los Angeles where stars and see that thev have been are developed and pictures are good to everyone during Paul man one n young made, 1931. We have so many diand who Bern, superintends to take care of this rects for year that I want to be sure knows exactly what he Is to visit the good little boys do. to trying and girls first. j Today In few words he gave information valuable to all directors, scenario wr.ters, and actors. When you make a picture said he, ask yourself what do the majority of the people LACK? , Santa Claus. White your letters to Santa Claus In care of the Herald-Journat Logan. We will hold the letters here until the special messenger from the North Pole calls for them. . and women go to the that moving pictures to find them-selves, which they have not in or in their surroundings. If it be true that a middle-age- d woman in Washington, D. C. went every single afternoon and ' evening'' to. see Valentino.. there. .was something about Valentino Y probably, that was lacking in her middle aged husband. The average human being feels the need, of many things, energy, intensity of living, free expression of emotion. actors Writers, directors and will succeed- in proportion as is they are able to supply whatus. lacking in the majority of what It is not easy to know the public craves. Livingston, t travelling through darkest Afn- I ca could not have imagined V that the pitiful black children g crowding around him were for salt. It was that they wanted. Sugar did not interest them. Men .r beg-gin- exhibition and begun in BThe haslivestock . Los Ahge- - to Farmers, will be interested learn from Paul Hill, livestock can specialist, of California, you big young, a here good, buy boned cow, in calf, for twenty dollars. With' cows on the hoof, wortha only two and a half cents pasturage pound, any man with In buying could make a profit . cattle. here in a It was suggested coast sunmoment of Pacific in that relaxation mental shiny will not work men come to days to make money but to do good. reader asks An Impatient How will you interest men in working, if not to accumulate property? Did you ever know of anybody working really hard except for money? had the Samuel Johnson same idea when he said that except nobody ever wrote well for pay, but he was mistaken. DEM FUNDS RAISED John F. DENVER, Dec- 1 Vivian, prohibition administrator of five mountain states, resigned today1 after a one-da- y of investigation of his methods enforcing the dry law had been made by Amos W. W. Woodcock, national prohibition director. The investigation was precipitated by the fatal beating of old Melford G. Smith by Prohibition Agent Henry F.Dierks, other charges of brutality leveled against Vivians agents, and revelation that Vivian negotiated for a $4,000 loan from Dierks two months before he appointed him an agent. Woodcock already had sus- pended Dierks, who faces a charge 0f first degree murder, and In acceppting Vivian s resCarl ignation he appointed Jackson, prohibition administrator with headquarters in Seattle as new dry chief of Colorado, Utah, Arizona and Wyoming, New Mexico- Jackson is a native of Wyoming. ar - P.T.A. Workers Hear Talk On Imagination of Imagination Problems were discussed by Miss Anna Page, member of adult training instruction staff of the state department of education, Monday night at the Cache county school offices. The talk and discussion came as part of the activity of a Cache Countymeetiassociation ng- Those in attendance were. Joseph Malmberg and Miss Sena Miner, both of Clarkston; Mis. Bessie Jones and Mrs. Oscar Hendry, Wellsville; Mrs. Leonard Olsen and Mrs. F. L. Allen. Smith field; Andrew King and Mrs. Burns Crookston, North Logan; and Mrs. Loretta Rigbyof and Mrs. Mary Dowdle. both mv soul." VET SHOOTS SELF BOISE, Idaho, Dec. 1. (t'.l! A series of events, none too HERE . I If an African kills a lion, 11 as a reward, from ten , Yanis to fifty fat, black wives. An English sportsman will gladly ID kill the' lion for nothing. would rejoH the wives as superfluous. Thewill day is as comingI super-when men reject iluous, unnecessary money for which they struggle now. ' d pleasant, caused Orville Wilmoth, 30, World war veteran, to shoot hmfciX. He had no job. He wrecked his car, and his health was poor, so in a sudden frenzy, Monday evening at 11:30 o'clock, he placed a gun to his chest and fired, as he stood near h.s bride of five months. Palais Or Tuesday Dec. 8 Wet Running; i For Hoover League Agreement Is Acceptable To China, Japan Thwarted BY RAYMOND CLAPPER WASHINGTON, Dec. 1. the stale road commission, was The movement to advance an todav reappointed to the com eastern opponent of prohibition mission for a six year term as President Hoovers running mate next year apparently has bv Gov. George H. Dern. been thwarted by the decision of Fir-man- e, Curtis nt By RICHARD L. McMILLAN PARIS, Dec. 1 (tMii china and Japan are ready to accept the league of nations plans for peace In Manchuria. The compromise was based on withdrawal of Japanese troops from the Chlnchow area to satisfy China and guarantee of protection of Japanese from Manchurian bandits to satisfy Japan. Both delegations announced officially their agreement with the ternrs. to BOYS LAST stand for renomination. The announcement of Curtis GALLUP, N. M.. Dec. 1 (UP) - Eugene Eracho and Charles that he would accept renonnna-tio- n school boys, is taken by Republican Alonzo, were lost today in Nurtia canleaders generally as insuring his yon, with searchers hopeful thpy selection by the national con- COMMITTEE NAMED FOR I INCH OX Members of the central of 11 will be in charge of the function. Others in the group are: H. J. Hatch, County Commissioner L. H. Allen, Mayor A. G. Lundstrom, Eugene Yeates, chairman of the Cache county chapter, American Red Cross; W. F. Jensen, representative of the local Elks lodge; Mrs. Bessie G. Ballard, president of the Logan women in direct charge of the storehouse activity; Mrs. Lulu Y. Smith, ' com-m.tt- PEACE PLAN PARKER RENAMED SALT LAKE' CITY, Dec. .1 UP-J. Parker, member of As one means of i arsing the fund for maintenance of the Cache County Community storehouse a Chanty Ball will be field in the Palais dOr Tuesday night, December 8. Tills announcemi nt was made Tuesday morning by A. A. general chan man of the storehouse organization central committee. na-tion- als had taken refuge with a band vention. of Indians known to be in the WOULD BE ALL district. DRY TICKET ee (UP) 1 r. LANDS IN RENO RENO, Nev. Dec. 1 UP) James Wedell, making a pro. flight from Caliente to Vancouver. B. C arrived here at 8:30 a. m. and took off at 8:54 a. m. jected round-tri- p Augua ASK WAGE CUT CHICAGO, Dec. 1 uj; Chicago & Northwestern an all-dticket. This would upset the plans of some eastern Republicans, who have felt the party should make an appeal to the antiprohibition states such as Ne. York and New Jersey by nomian nating for outt.gnt enemy of prohibition such as Theodore Roosevelt, now governor of Porto Rico. They favored this on the expectation that the Democrats would name an who by combining the south with several big antiprohibition states in the north might endanger Republican suc- complete nt The cess. Curtis was named in 1928 beroad has asked an immediate cause of his appeal to the farm' re15 cent wage voluntary per particularly in Kansas duction of its 40,000 union em- states, where he is extremely popular, W. Fred ployes, Sargent, presi- and because of his popularity dent, announced today. among certain old-liparty leaders who originally were hosGETS OFFERS tile to Hoover. rail- are Indians upper picture UTAH talking over the problems of A street scene in the the day. tribal town, in the second picture, is much as it was 400 years ago. The map on the right shows the location of the Zuni and Navajo reservations in New Mexico and Arizona. Their ter&O0VX ritory is principally a barren NSWHSXOO waste, suited only for grazing TSi , -other animals and sheep, goats TEXAS able to climp the steep sides of the mesas for their food. Typical shown in Zuni the MANY FAMILIES GIVE AID PARIS, Dec. 1. (f.niSo great PLANS TO STAND To date, since the storehouse is her fame since she went to ON RECORD on Novemopened Wednesday, Hoover-CurtA ticket also GALLUP, N. M Dec. 1 (I'D ber 17, in the. Weston Vernon Washington - with, her father, quarters of the Arimo block, 35 that Mile. Josette Laval is would emphasize the adminis The Indian nation of the south- families of Logan, and a few swamped with alluring offers trations intention of standing, west reJiced today as draggling from elsewhere in Cache coun- to sign her name to testimonies on its own record, without any products, soaps, switch of candidates to appeal parties of Navajo and Zuni Pin-o- nty have received aid from the for beauty nut pickers arrived, exhaustthe relief depot, according to Mrs. stockings and reducing pow- to different sect.ons of Curtis spent almost ec. but jihve, back In civiUza-th- e Nellie B. Langton, secretary of ders. country. entire 1928 campaign on Bon after being marooned sev-th- em the storehouse project commitdaFs on blizzard swept mes-fartee. road, concentrating on thelen MIX IS BETTER asstates. Each Wedivsday and SaturHOLLYWOOD, Dec. 1. (UR) The main theme of the Re-- j As reports were assembled day, the storehouse is open from The condition of Tom Mix, mopublican appeal will be to stand from those still on the mesas, it 2 to 6 p. m, with at least two tion picture actor who is recovtotal deaths women attendants on hand to ering from peritonitis, the result by the Hoover administration appeared that thewould be only serve those in need of food and of a ruptured appendix, con- in its effort to conquer the de- from the storm had where it been feared not nine, and horses pression. change and clothing which the com-mit- tinued to improve today. Althe scores, or even hundreds and many church, civic though physicians statements Renomination of Curtis would might die from the Intense cold. and private relief agencies have continued to be com.'ative, break That more did not die. was party pre considered collected in a large amount hospital attendants considered cedent. a Republican due to the hardiness never It has repeated him well over the crisis. during the last few months. on candidates 'of the Indians, and to their ... enabled them to live, but with MILLIONAIRE DIES hastily erected brusli shelter, for .seven days during which Pi EVANSTON. 111., Dec. 1. time the temperature dropped millionaire Edward Hines, as low as 25 degrees below lumber merchant, philanthropIDAHO: Fair tonight, some- - zero, ist and Republican leader, died what wanner north and west Manv of the Indian ponies at his home in Evanston today Wednesday increasing- - weie killed and eaten to stave of chronic heart disease and portion; l.v cloudy. Warmer: snow ex- - off hunger, He was 58 years treme pneumonia. north portion. There was one note of sorrow old. PRESTON Funeral services UTAH: Fair tonight and Wed- - inlhe re'!rlnf' Thousands of for Mrs. Ida Purnell Hobbs. 73, dollars woith oi the pinon nuts, nesday; warmer southwest por- - one TURKEYS SOLD were held at the Preston First of tlu chief sources of in1 ward chapel, Sunday at 1 p. m. come of the tribes, had to be POCATELLO, Idaho, Dec. d Bishop L. V. Merrill of the First 0J.P Nearly 11,000 Maximum temperature Mon-- , abandoned on the high mesas Thanksgiv-Warwhere they were gathered presided and was also one 'ing dinners on the hoof, were dav. 15; one year ago, 26. of the speakers. sold and shipped east by the last cause the horses were too weak temperature The cnurch was filled to ca- - Idaho 1 7 to carry them. below; one year ago, turkey pool. 'night. parity by those who came to pay tribute to one of this countys y JAPAN ASKS FOR PROTECTION The spokesman added that it was Imperative that neutral observers continue to furnish re- is ports from Manchuria and that the commission of inquiry be organized immediately and remain in Manchuria and China NEW YORK, Dec. 1 (UP) Numerous influences sent the reporting regularly to the coun-ci- l. stock market through a wide arc today and hnally resulted Japan is ready to accept the close (resolution providing' that" it in an irregularly lower with nearly all issues above I tail a precautionary clause "for their early lows. protection against bandits and The opening was about steady lawless elements, Bobumi Ito, but the list quickly shot down. Japanese member of the draftFilling gutnoil momentum until ing committee, said. losses ex"et oed 5 points. The It was understood the Chinese when requested that the neutral heaviest selling was comwheat was driven down at the mission be increased from three rea and subsequent to seven members but that the opening covery took place later when )Councll recommended a comThe raly promise of five members. Chinwheat turned up lasted until late in the day ese acceptance of the resolution when the market slid off from was corroborated in a statement the highs. late last night saying; Assuming that the report CONDITIONS NORMAL that the Japanese are withLOS ANGELES. Dec. 1 (UP the Chinchow drawing from Two hundred and lifty men re- area is true, China under such sumed work in the east Los circumstances will be prepared Angeles shops oi the Union Pa- to take the draft resolution of cific railroad todav. marking a the council substantially as it return to almost normal condi- stands without specifying a tions Those employed in the time limit foi complete evacuacar repair department and back tion. shops who were laid off last October were included in those - mid-strea- The entire pioneer mothers. rostrum of the church was a solid bank of floral offerings. Special music was contributed by the chcoir. J. Leslie Hobbs, a grandson of the deceased, sang a solo. Margaret Smith and Vera Merrill sang a vocal solo as did Harold Swift and Ezra Alldredge The speakers were: Bishop John Griffin of the Logan Fourth ward, A. H. Jensen. President W. K. Barton and President Joseph S. Geddes, all of Preston, Prayer. were offered by L. A. Mecham of Preston, - and James Packer of Franklin. CV..O- Interment was in the Franklin cemetery. & o I rul r, given lobs. GERMAN National 4H Club Champions Air Views ' J 5- cp cp rp rp rp rp - LIVES- girl who INTERNATIONAL . TOCK 4-- H p I rp rp cp rp rp rp rp rp What Marian believes about a More live on farms would units, diver-ntown or city number of present day topics of siiied farming, larger rather youths for anything. One girl. general interest is tabulated be- - than smaller farms. If who lives in a small town, said low: Agrieultural colleges: more farmers had gone to Farm life versus city life: she would not want to live either in the country or in a "Farm folk can have most ail agiicullural colleges, there wouldn't be any depression the advantages city folk havelarge city. Black-eyed on the farms. They would Mar- - We can have electric lights, have learned the law of ian Dolan. 16. who lives with electric sweepers and washers, her parents and two sisters on running water in our houses supply and demand cannot be broken." Hard a farm near Sun Prair- - and other conveniences. Prohibition: I .do not believe ie, Wis seemed the most serious roads lead everywhere. WTe can minded of the group. Although have just as much fun, live it is a good law. It should be a mere slip of a girl, she drove more independently and have done away with. Roscoe Owens. 18, who lives a team and hauled eorn to better health. market after her father's right Marriage: I havent thought with his parents on a farm near Guilford, N. Y., and hand had been cut off in a corn that far ahead yet. Maybe. The depression: It hit the who has completed a short shredder. farmer first. But we werent course in the state agrieultural Marian has been a four-1- 1 old fashioned club member six years, and a having any harder a time than school, thinks have proved to be methods leader of her group for five, the city folk. needs: the fanners chief handicap. What the farmer She is a high school senior. j - black-haire- i 196-ac- UP 10 TARIFF CABINET ot trade with d, PLAN The league council hoped to a compromise resolution satisfactory to both nations in time for a public session of the council Wednesday or Thursday. The council oX 13, without China and Japan, de- cided not to meet today in order that all delegates might help complete the tesotattaa.' 1 The' resolution will provide for the speed evacuation of Manchuria by Japanese Stoops and the appointment of a neutral commission of inquiry. Dr. Alfred Sze, chief Chinese delegate, has abadoned his original request for a specific date of evacuation and also for a period during which evacuation must be completed, a Chinese told the United spokesman Press. He is willing to negotiate on the existing resolution provided the council is satisfied the Japanese are retiring from the Chinchow area." ry Cabana, air mail pilot miss ing since late yesterday, w is found by a rescue pilot 55 miles north of here today and brought to El Paso. Relief Society; Mrs. Christensen, president of the Hyrum Stake Relief Society; Mrs. Effie A. Green of the Benson stake Relief Society and Mrs. Harold R. Kepner, president of the Ladies Aid society of the Presbyterian church. Tickets will be 50 cents a couple, Mr. Firmage said. All proceeds from the dance will go to the storehouse for dis pensing needy relief during the winter months. Further plans for the function will be nounced during the week. case Republicans go to the country with would A1 staked Laura L. COMPROMISE READY SOON In that PILOT FOUND EL PASO, Tex., Dec. rp c Indians Saved But Mourn Over Nut Loss CHIEXPOSITION, The five CAGO, Dec. 1 (U.P) club boys champions of the and girls of the nation, two girls and three boys, answered grownup questions in grownup fashion today and supplied a symposium of what the farm youths of America thinks about such things as manners and morals, economics and happiness, and marriage and prohibition. SERVICES UAL Both girls believe prohibi'Tis best that you travel along Funeral services for J. B Ripp-tn",tion has failed. Both think all is tour who died suddenly in On your shopping It the law should be repealed. All three boys think prohi'(alt Lake Saturday will be held wrong 1 u. m. in the To rush, the last minute. bition is a good thing, alWednesday at Hoin Rmlifuds lunersl home Therev. no pleasure in it though none believes it has . Do it now and avoid a mud gan. Burial will be in the Lobeen entirely successful. Three of the boys and one gan cemetery. throng. WbidCr rp cp rp iUNITED PRESS 10 BF Hall To Be In presiderrrTTrttrir-'-Ctac- John Bunyan wrote Pilgrim's no thought of Progress with book has been his And pay. translated and more widely published than any other except Newton. the bible. Newton, worked at his law of gravitation, giving to human brings the most important knowledge they ever received, and 'w.thout any desire for pay.When with intense happiness. calcula-lion- s he perceived that the leading to his .formula in'directly as the mass and the versely as the square of work distance were about to out, satisfactorily, his excitement was so great, that he had to let another fin.sh the calculations. Michael Angelo, as he wrote lo the pope, made nothing from his work on St. Peters Cathedral, except for the benefit to -- QUITS r(p 8 FROM THE al rhil-dre- rp rp flashes al . R1 PPrprprcr) Charity Ball fbr Storehouse Aid Planned vV I Price 6 Cents. FIVE O'CLOCK EDITION re 460-ac- , -- re BERLIN. Dec. 1 UR Presi- dent Paul Von Hindenburg Issued an emergency decree today empowering the German cabinet to change the existing customs duties according to fluctuations of the world market." The first cabinet of Dr. Heinrich Bruening received similar powers from the Reichstag, but the measure expired with the cabinets resignation in October. Agricultural tariffs may be lowered with r view to reducing spokesprices, - a .government man told the United Press. An increase In duties to meet Great Britain's new tariffs la not expected for the time being, he said- - J |