OCR Text |
Show I nail Americanism B' 4$ law tnfuriun, :i! 'I': friend at iit-hall your trafiie tag Demanding "fix Nun.lx r y,. Volume 24. L 0 G A N, UTAH, Direct Action Is Cry As Farmers Plan March I) N O L "k A IV I , 9 1 BAC KS Withdrawal Believed Inevitable By mands UNI Vb 70 AWt NU 5ALbb ALUjw No STOP POPLCLOSORcS CNLV NOMINAL KtlOKNO JPLHAStl E'Uh. (I TO FARM C'WNLUo 1 mm-mitte- IWW v ' HOW iVUTlOrS KCUP-Stoo- d Relief From l, RAND CANVll.N. An., Fell. I ,i Iin, i, d li h ml huge barrier.) ut l'.iw, i ion- than 2iKI Inen tile isolated Havasupai dians reservation were near starvation today. Sup!. Roy Adams miormed officials here. wood for fuel and Fnlfieirnt sh. Iter was hilieved avmlnble. The re, ent 12 days of continuous snowfall shut nif tbp reservation flora the remainder of the wm Id. i! j i NEW DEMURRER IN -i TAX SUIT FILED OGDEN, r cb. 1 (I ip The Ogden SEOUL. Korea, Feb. 1 UUP- -city commission, by a vote of 2 Five Japanese troop trains, ail to 1 exonerated Police Captain L. Demurrer to the suit of Logan loaded to capacity, passed through W. Pack for Ins part in the reto route en Manchuria here today City Coi potation against the Cache held Minnie Mrs. of Colletti, lease to augment Japanese forces al- on a federal county commissioners, members of liquoi charge. the state tax commission, ami ready stationed there. I rs. C. and T. B. Budge and IvUi GOES BEGGING .J W. Hayward representing SALT LAKE, Feb. 1 U.R - Out the Willi im Budge Memorial hosof thousands of applications from pital, wis filed m Fir t district Utah Democrats seeking positions court Tucoday by members rf the the new Democratic regime, tax commission. The tax officials, DEER MEAT under net one has applied for the posi- R. E. Hammond, George A. Critch-loof tion end Howard P. Leatham, deputy prohibition adminI to the istrator with an annual salary of city's complaint on to grounds that the and according expenses, $2800 action does not Joined in the search and seiz- National Committeeman Orman sufficient grounds on ure act by the Cache county and W. Ewing. The position is now constitute which to file suit. Thomas held officers, Logan city The demurrer was signed by by Wallace McBride. Argyle, district fish and game Joseph Chez, attorney general for Utah Tuesday SEAPLANE PORTS supervisor of Utah, and G. A. Giles, deputy atbrought about the arrest of Oliver In furthering torney general who will likely VANCOUVER LoEames and Mark Smith of act as defense Counsel for the tax transportation, Canada seagan and Heber Olsen of River seaplane commissioners in the suit. Someestablished has permanent unHeights charging them with ports ut Echo Bay on Great time ago the hospital officials plane of lawful possession game. Bear lake in the northwest terri- named in the complaint demurThe officers alleged they found tory, and in Vancouver harbor, red on similar grounds. The coundeer meat in the possession of British A regular air ty commissioners, two of whom Columbia. tac three men. mail service has been scheduled have retired, Messrs Allen and Arraigned during the day in between Fort Resolution, north- - Hall, have their demurrer in the G. Newel city court before Judge Jesse P. west territory, and Great Bear hands of Attorney Rich, Eames and Smith pleaded lake. The lake lies partly within Dailies. court in Action was brought by to the charge, and the Arctic Circle and is one of guilty were told to appear in court the most northern ports for sea- Logan city through City Attorney reto Leon Fonnesberk seeking again on Monday, Feb. 6, at 10 planes. cover $1078.50 which the city offia. m. for passing of sentence. lost through a cials Logan allege PLANES GROUNDED They were then released on their compromise settlement made on own recognizance without bond. gkl-LAKE, Feb. 1 (IU! More the Budge hospital taxes for Olsen pleaded not guilty a 1929, 1930 and 1931 to heavy snow htorms caused - the charge and was released grounding of all airmail planes on out Lake bond furof under Salt of $500 pending operating ther developments in his case. Wednesday. LADIES - I Ir THREE ARRESTED f WITH ! re Columbia graduate, Lief Dahl at 2t, left, leads Nebraska farmers in their no foreclosure program while Mrs. Theresa Von Bonn and four of her seven children, right, live securely on the income from cattle saved from foreclosure by organized farmers.., in wlnil Nebraska fanners regard as their Battle Of Lexington. h Today Arthur Brisbane By (Copyright, 1932) Having had their revolution, their commune., their jacquerie, and many an outburst since the the days of old Charlemagne, French are not as docile as the Americans. ' mild When the French government last week announced new, heavier taxes, the French did not say: That's too bad, and look around for money to pay. They gathered in paris-igreat crowds, prepared to march across the Seine to the chamber of deputies, and to Elysee palace, where the French president lives, and fought the police. The National Federation of Taxpayers in France has a membership of 700,080 which means someare 700,000 thing when the French. The mild American pays when he is told to pay. and slips resignedly into bankruptcy when he can't pav any longer. NOT THE n FRENCH. Experts agree to disagree, tech- nocracys Mohammed going off by himself with great dignity, telling lesser lights of Columbia University: You cant possibly bring our great industrial civilization to disaster without my complete help. Technocracy is now called a vanishing theory, but it is not that. The idea that civilizations must die because it is able to produce ail that human beings need, with the help of machinery, is nonsense. But it is still a fact that civilization is governed bv selfishness the biggest mi n thinking only about more profit for Uv.iselves, competing, multiplying stupidly production facilities without ardistribution. for ranging News for technocracy worriers. Men for centuries have tried unsuccessfully to climb Ml. Everest, highest peak on earth. Many lives have been ioxt in the attempt. Now pilots will take their airscientific obcameras, planes, servers, over the great peak and mountains, and, let surrounding three wail, within technociacy hours from the time they start, that they will have photographs y will enable them to map every inch of the Mount Everest region, securing a perfect survey of mountain, glaciers, vines, everything on the surface What the of the great mass. accn-rntel- AIM TO EASE The Impatient French. Technocracy Not Dead. Bones In The Nest. Our Age Of Billions. DEBT will do , in three hours, thousand feet, p thirty-fiv- e a thousand men, crawling, climb-tecould do in many not slipping, is technocracy, which yearfThat geese call the modern curse. fliers going g. the border between Finland and Russia, a great pine tree brought down by lumbermen had in the top an eagle's nest containing the skeleton of a child that had bsen missing for On two years. Shreds of clothing identified the child. At first we wonder that little eagles could be hippy growing up in a nest with the hopes of a helpless child around them. Then we that human children remember with grow- up very pleasantly chicken bones and sheep bones on their plates, and are not shocked. It is all habit. We are, indeed, living in the Once we venage of BILLIONS. erated the word million. A man who accumulated one poor little million was somebody. Not now. The national state and local income amounts to ninety billions in good times. Wages atone were sixty thousand million dollars a The gloomy side is the year. iliht side. Leaving out odd hundreds of millions, you find the following dcht figures, as of 1929: isr mortgages and other debts: Farmers, 12 BILLIONS steam Public lailroads 12 BILLIONS. debts, national, straight and loca' Debts of BILLIONS THIRTY corporations SEVENTY - FOUR Individual debts, BILLIONS. apart from farmers, 24 BILLIONS. BILLIONS. Total, 152 Congressmen Plan Raise In Salaries Feb U'.l'i WASHINGTON, United States senators and forced to cut congressmen, cent their salaries 10 per some months ago, arc-- eagerly looking ior.vard to July 1, 1933. The cut will be eliminated then. Each senator and will get a raise of jinoo a year. lads Pome of the bright fixed it" while they were $30 cutting postmen, laborers, a month clerks and various federal emother poorly-pai- d ployes recently. The $)0,0i0 salaries were voted, . as usual. Then a separate bill was passed, making a cut of 10 per cent, for one year only. It was figured hie public would forget about the cut and that, when the law automatically died June 30. 1933, the old salaries would be rethe with nobody stored senators and wiser, except congressmen. There is, it may be recorded. no provision for restoring full s.darics to mail an Happy-- f BMlidnijI To Dr. Frank lin L West, dean of the faculty of the U3AC, who observes today his birthday an- iversary, 1 h VVr yHerald yw - Journal extends hearty uVV I congratu ati o ni is and -- fi L BURDEN IN NEBRASKA .471-- 4 .47 .48 8 .491-- 8 .44 3-- 8 .483-- 8 Technocracy Only Fad Says Automobile Leader "'X' Group idu-catio- j ' . i.ijV 1M.4.NS - 1 DwYfikliL. , H Henry Tlfll ,l'iTOKIO, Feb. Japanese n V witiidiuwul from the league of r. SALT LAKE, Feb Nations appeared inevitable today Joseph F. Merrill, I, L.S. ap'i.v.ir lifter a conference between the and church comr.usiumei of and ta Uchida, is making piepi.ratio.ia foreign minister, Prince Saiorjai leave next week on an inspection Tokio newspapers said the prince trip to the Mexican mission. agreed with lh foreign minister MALNTUN STANDARDS that Japan must vriJulraw if the 1 a League .'.pnroves a report conS ALT t.AKE, Fob in demning Japanese activities strong pita for a sufficient apManchuria. maintain propriation to at least standards was inane by OKANG--CHUFib 1 il n -- present of the Thomas President George e Fariy outbreak of fighting be- University of Utah when a tween Japanese and Chinese troops from the Utah legislature inin is massed Jehol province visited the campus Wednesday. evitable" Japanese milita-i predicted today. CLEAR OFFICER 1 ' . 'I 1" for NtiiLt economy in suite government acre given f id port of the Suit I.i.ke Rotary i'..n meeting W ednesdi.y Japan FAkMfk'5 REWIND 1 8 Bright Future On Solid Groundwork u LAKE, Fell to meet bond inters s', due today caused the Bamberger F.'ei-tri- c railroad to pass into receivership late Wednesday Feb SLT ofLAKE. Governor Sept. 5-- Henry Ford Sees j KliMlli' IV July Open High Low Close PRICE FIVE CENTS BY UNITED PRESS SALT Wheat May .S flashes LEAGUE AND Grain Range Henry Ford NOT GUlTYPLEA OF RADIO GROUP Copyright by United Press DEARBORN, Mich., Feb. 1 The depression is over; we are in a period of recovery, Henry Ford told the United Press in an exclusive interview today. The period from 1923 to 1929 was the real depression, Mr. Ford stated, for it was then that quality and design In manufactured things came to a standstill, prices went up and values dropped. COUNTRY WAS NEAR RUIN Five years more of the "boom period" would have ruined this country, he asserted. he dismissed as Technocracy, a whim of the times; a moving picture label for an old story.. Machinery will never go until man is ready to resume old methods and give up the ease and leisure it has produced, he said. "Everybody I talk to these days wants me to discuss technocracy, said Ford, or prophesy the return of the bad old times. If people would stop to think,, they would see that nothing could be worse than a return of what we had previous to 1929. We are just recovering from that period. FALSE PROPHETS WERE MISSING We had been going along fairly well until now because false prophets have been few. In previous readjustments, the false prophets swarmed. The public mind was taken off the real issue by scores of proposed fake remedies. That was not the case this time, until technocracy came along. It was new. Its name was It seemed to be the mysterious. last great product of university , It took the world by learning. surprise, much as poison ' gas I did during the war. But x see that nowTa gas mask has bee i Invented and technocracy is except as a thing to talk al , n - HELENA, Mont., Feb. 1 (UJ! Pleas of not guilty to charges of using the iralls to defraud in with Baldwin Radio j" connection corporation stock sales were entered by 17 defendants before LINCOLN, Neb., Feb. 1 NEA- -A Federal Judge George Bourq-i- n march on the legislature to ALLOT FUNDS toduy. present with overpowering force the demands of Nebraska's The group included all of those ADVANCE TIME OF SALT LAKE. Feb. 1 r.DA LOGAN indicted by a federal grand jury third apportionment of $1.72 bringfarmers, is expected here Feb. 16. in Butte. ing the total district school fund $15.41 was announced toHeading the list was Nathaniel MEETING issued to Slate Organized farmers plan to inof Superintendent sist on a program that amounts to day by Members of the Logan Kiwanis Baldwin, Salt Lake president of H. Charles a debt moratorium: No deficiency company, public instruction club Tuesday night found on their JJ1 Make no crop mortgages, arrival at the Bluebird for their judgments, The mass meeting in the inter- Skidmore. forelower auto license costs, no est of prohibition will be held at weekly dinner gathering that their Logan city comnuT,augh ON PLANES CARRY RUIXION closures, no evictions. ladies had usurped the throne CUPID the tabernacle Thursday night at day night, went on A Mexican CLIMAXES MU( H on CITY a MEXICO 7 p. m. instead of 7:30 as previousand were having surprise disapproving the decision s. DIRECT ACTION Mrs. I. S. Smith, mining company regularly ships them. ly announced, Judge Jesse P. Rich in h This march, which is planned president of the Cache stake Relief gold and silver bullion by plane As President Louis A. Petersen fusaJ to participate with t of interior in the along the lines of the parade to Society, mine the announced from the Kiwanians its td up Wednesday city employes, elective and Congress of last year, is the cli- morning. the west coast port. way jnt0 the dining hall, the pointive. In continuation of a max of months of direct action Thirty-thre- e Mazatlan, steamers carry jR.s had everything ready to take Because of the Junior high marriage licenses cent pay cut during 1933, or: Mrs. Mose were issued during January, the per by farmers to prevent forced school opera presentation at the the bullion to California. This avi- - over the meeting. the such part of the year as sales and eviction .of school auditorium at 8:30 p. m., ation service is reported to save Thatcher was in the chair super- - files of County Clerk C. V. Mohr commission may decide Is best farmers from their homes. She show. This compares with 29 for was chosen for the company time and money in ceding President Peterson. the earlier time for the citys interests. The movement in Nebraska is the to opened the dinner gathering by January, 1932. During 1932, 688 prohibition conclave to enable getting its mineral products emLast February the city and is said making a brief talk. only slightly more militaut than those desiring to attend both the market promptly, to obtain marcouples appeared in several other states. In Iowa, Harold M. Peterson was per- riage certificates at the Cache ployes agreed to take a 10 per and the opera with little to be highly efficient. meeting have where for weeks farmers cent cut in pay, and Judge Rich,' mitted a place on the program county courthouse. or no conflict as to time. banded together to prevent foreCANNON SALVAGED Of the 33 licenses to wed is- who, as an elective officer, draws This mass meeting has been just long enough to lead the group closures. Gov. Oiyde L. Herring is called too highest pay check in the in r round of community singing. sued by Mr. Mohr and his depujointly by Logan and Cache ALBANY, Ore., Feb. 1 il'Ii deworking on a proclamation g st ike L.D.S. Relief Societies, Mu- A d brass Responses to Mrs. Thatcher vere ties 20 were issued to Idaho cou- city service of $3000 a year, or signed to give relief, probably a tuals and Primary organizations cannon was E. $250 a month. He consented last ples, II to Utah. pulled from the depths given by Mesdamcs Clarko moratorium on foreclosures. Wis- at the of the general presi- of Willamette river here by a Haskins and Mrs. J. C. Hayward. Illinois was given as the home February to participate in the consin already has such a meas- denciesrequest ' includlovenumbers 10 per cent cut but during Janthose groups in Salt dredging crew after gravel. of one of of 33 Other the program It pairs of ure, and Indiana has one in effpct Lake City. ed to entertain the 41 displaced birds seeking right to enter bonds uary of this year asked City to be the cannon Repubproved until February. 1931. Minnesota Speakers will be President licans brought to Albany to cele- Kiwanians und their successors of wedlock. One couple showed Auditor H. R. Pedersen to reinmembers of the "Root Hog or Charles O. Dunn of Logan stake brate the election in 1861. Democomprised a solo dunce, by Miss the groom from one state, the state him on the payroll at his Die" club of southern Minnesota presidency ana Supt. Alma Sonne crats foiled the plans by pushing Fannte Hodges; a girls trio, Dixie bride from another. regular salary. moved on the legislature in a mo- of the Cache stuke Y.M M I.A. The it into the river, before the Re-- i Johnson, Oralie Bailey and MarI1D NOT JOIN IN tor caravan. The Nebraska move- chairman selecnot and violin a for the has REICHSTAG OUT to meeting Quinney; jorie fire a chance had SECOND CUT is publicans ment is only typical of what selected. been 1 tion by Miss Otalie Bailey. Miss The a;.l BERLIN, Feb. u In August, 1932, tile city em- -. going on throughout the corn belt. for special musiGladys Bailey was accompanist Reichstag was dissolved tonight ploycs, urged by the city com"It's revolution! say small- calArrangements the violin numbers and numbers. the trio for Chancellor evening Hitlers by during Adolph DECLARED ALIY E town bankers and merchants. mission, agreed to an additional are under direction of the Primary To round out the evening, the cabinet under authority of a de10 per cent pay cut, so that since "It's necessity! reply the farmMARINETTE, Wis., Feb. 1 (I ii group attended a theater of the two stakes. follow- cree signed earlier in the day by organizations ers. that date the city workers have Handt, who was missing ing the dinner. One of the features of this meetVon President Paul Hindenburg. Ill N'DKEDS ENLIST been drawing only 80 per cent besides the talks and possible for 22 years after escaping from ing, deIN ASSOCIATION of their normal pay. Judge Rich is Will be a country asylum, has been of the Nebraska discussion, it of a expected to the clared "legally alive and sane. Organization did not participate in the second the signing petition he in 1929, farmers is going on nightly, with state declared dead 1C per cent slash. that body Although hundreds signing the membership not tolegislature asking in Rhinelander Back in 1919, the state legispass any resolution calling has been living cards of the Holiday Association, either for to obtain came here lature fixed the salary of the repeal or modification and recently Madison County Flun. code in a court order to show thut he the city judge in communities "When it gets so we and our of the present prohibition was alive. e nation. legally of Logan at $3000 a year. families cant live under the civil operation throughout the Tnis statute has not been alterlaw, and those laws aren't changLINED RATS' NEST ' ed since. There is also provisions ed. well just have to protect our1 i'l!i Feb. CHURCH APPLETON, Wis., that the salary cannot be changselves. a j found C. WillMir Jnnos When Andrew Dale "Mormon I5y people. They had . ed during the term of any judge-An- y These words are repeated at contained had which In clock! the back Turn seen the moboerats glass jar take of change in pay would effect farmers in small meetings 15 paper dollars and some silver his successor only in so far as of tmeir fathers go with me to the Lopossession fancy overturned he suspected it was an the the of (Continued On Page Two.) the law is concerned and that sixties, gan large farm near Nauvoo, inside job. The silver was strewn and the which he had but seventies, Illinois, eighties change, to be legally effective, counabout his store. Behind a nineties. Taen the communAll' Trkp who, far would have to be brought about from the purchased recently born ncwlv he found several with ter sale of ms ity v,.o aotlui.g like t is tofarm years, was connected by Hire ration of the staiutcs. property the j with lined neot in rats a UT1A31EK he work of the The motion to have written, near Illinois. day. The houses were fewer, Presbyterian dollar bills. Springfield, ' the hardships greater. into the city commission minutes They had seen the long line hospital at San Juan, Porto E.ico, Is a Logan visitor today At the Real men and women dwelt a record of the commissions disof dilapidated prairie schoon- WAMP Tntf HU iT Lilf MrTiinn men here then. Courageous ers zigzag across the Ameripresent tune she is engaged on approval of Judge Rich's stand 1 Feb. EUGENE, Ore., who knew no fear. Resourcea speaking tour among the Preswas made by can wilderness. had Mayor A. G. They new a tried Gasoline way thieves ful men who turned difficulseen the Lundstrom. exiles byterian churches of the western to fill their tanks here. They bored haggard The commission approved ties into assets. the establish their homes near John Skabclund of the College states under the auspices of tue f hole in a large storage tank and FEBRUARY WAS the uninviting snores of the January payroll for city workers, Barber shop was elected presi-- I Poard of NalionalDr.Missions. ad- drained off what they wanted, IMPORTANT MONTH Burke This afternoon and instructed auditor Pedersen great American Dead Sea. dent of Local No. 757, American the hole with a piece of to distribute tne checks in the In (wo of those early pinot Association of Master Barbers, dressed the Women's Missionary plugging mere lads, the Although wood. plug Unfortunately, two oneer1 nomes the first following amounts: electric light at a meeting of the membership Society at the home of Mrs. H. failed to hold and 1,189 gallons in their teens, they had yet j held in the Chamber of Com- -' P. Kepner. This evening she will drained off overnight. days in February were markplant fund, $1893.85; general fund assisted in piercing the hard-bakat ed days. They were among $36i7.88. merce rooms Monday night Mr. speak at a public meeting soil of the basin with the most important on the MiS CONFERENCE Skabelund succeeds H. J. Carlisle, 7:45 o'clock in the auditorium of had WORTH $2iM).ooojMH) improvised They plows. ON RAILROAD calendar. On the first day Riiicd in the planting and proprietor of the Main Barber the local Presbyterian church. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Feb. 1 tU ID W. of that month George Mayor Lundstrom informed the shop. the harvesting of the Four educational institutions in first commission he had requested L. Other new officers are Leo HigThatiner. one of tie forein the Salt Lake valley. this city own property valued at crop Loand A. Jarvis, local freight and pasXT most picneer settlers of d Budge of the gins, vice president: $200,009,000, about With their parents they Smith, secretary and treasurer. gan, celebrated his birthday. senger agent of the Utah Idaho oad participated in the excommunity's total real estate. Tney Thain succeeded Watson On to the second, his brother Central Railroad company, They 5 Z are Harvard, Massachusetts in.. AA of the California days citing anand R. M. Smith respectively. H. a observed similar Moses urge General Manager P. stitute of Technology, Radcliffe gold-rushad made They two (By Unicod Press.) George was niversary. Mulcahy and other U. X C. ofcollege, and Boston university. their home near Sacramento ficials to ccme to Logan soon years older than his brothNEW YORK Adverse dividend even before a house had been er. Both were born in southfor a meeting with the FIRST SHERIFF news and fears of further divicity built in that place. For eight ern Illinois, one in 1840 and commission and VALPARAISO. Ind., Feb. 1 l.Ki dend slashes undermined the stock representative they had lived in the years in 1812. is the Neil the tha' first other residents j city market today after a brisk buying concerning Fry, Hebron, California mining section and As boys they had witnessed matter of the railroad's servio Democratic sheriff of Porter j UTAH Fair tonight and Thurs- movement had carried prices i Of Luo tile eracvxutiuuo vCoutmuod on page six) along Main street. county in 42 years. day; colder tonight. . SURPRISE KIWANIANS "cm-battl- REFUSli PROHI STILL , UPWARD TRAIL n, ni hard-presse- d 1,000-poun- muzzle-loadin- Pioneer Brothers Had Faith In Cache Valley si-- SPECIAL SPEAKER HERE hi rirn DDDEDC rr sev-er- a! bMDttvS flFRCERS j w' I ed f . F, one-thir- i ' h. The Weather SWSJSSSSSW |