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Show Ik WATCH FOR DIE HERALD m.id -- JOURNAL NOAHS ARK QUILT. IT'S UNUSUAL! What Folks Say Polo helps hunting and hunting helps polo. Maj. Don Henderson, U. S. A. polo enthusiast. With which are combined the Cache Valley Daily Herald, the Daily Herald and The Journal. Volume 22. Ten Pages Today Uumber 218. UTAH. LOGAN, I FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1931. FOUR O'CLOCK EDITION? .1, Price 5 Cents. ; i, ... i ,j, ' 11 T day Id) m By Arthur Brisbane (Copyright, 1931) Gelling Better. Strange Manicure Lady. An Engineer Police Manager. And Manager Curley Plays Golf. Boston, Mass. Retail merchants from many cities, here, and its discussing retailing problems find the spirit of Massachusetts cheerful, with the end of the unseasonable hot weather promising better business. At eight thirty oclock this morning, Governor Ely of Massachusetts, expressed at breakfast the definite opinion that conditions are better and will continue getting better. The first Democratic governor Massachusetts has had in a long time, he looks to one who has seen many governors like an able individual. He has a good gray eye, a strong chin, a well developed back head, and no objection to a fight if anybody suggests it. Boston says he has made good appointments. One of the governors ideas for employing the idle will interest other states, he has spent $250,000 fighting mosquitoes in Every dollar goes Cape Cod. to wages to men that dig narrow drainage ditches. The mosquitoes are discouraged, and the state will get it all back in increased land values and You see strange things in Boston. A manicure lady in the Copley Plaza barber shop wears spectacles with heavy horn rims. She isnt even a brilliant blonde and, her dark hair has no permanent or other wave- - The New York type man who was having his finger nails made an unnatural pink, was having a dull time. Unusual also is Bostons police commissioner, Eugene C. Hultman, an engineer, not a politician, and interested in making it possible for the Citizen who wants a policeman to get one. He says unless a citizen anywhere in Boston can get a policeman within two minutes after all my new signals are in working order, I shall consider myself a failure. This writer at police signal station pulled down a little hook, and this happened. Three policemen came on motorcycles, a patrol wagon rolled up, two policemen came in an automobile, carrying a fire extinguisher and all in less than three minutes. Mayors and police commissioners of other cities may want to ask Commissioner Hultman and Mayor Curley, of Boston about that. cloak-and-s- f, 3 M This is one of Mayor Curleys many busy days, and you would not willingly disturb him. He was presenting prizes on the Municipal Golf links, with a mellifluous speech with each prize. Later, he played a round with Ouimet as his partner, against Chauncey Williams and Fred Wright. Mr. Williams is the Sears Roebuck manager, Mr. Wright is an expert player. The odds were on Mayor Curley AND OUIMET. It is pleasing, as Hoppers Eaten By Seagulls Colo-FORT COLLINS, Sept. 18. (u PJ Colorado farmers who have battled through the summer against an overwhelming plague of grasshoppers had a new ally today in huge swarms of seagulls, which settled down out of nowhere in the fields of this vicinity. The birds, assumed to be from the region of Salt Lake City, arrived in such large flocks that they covered the fields in some cases. . Their arrival recalled the historical cricket plague of 1849 at Salt Lake City, when seagulls similarly arrived on the scene to eliminate the pests. The pioneer Latter-da- y Saints erected a statue which stands near the great Mormon tabernacle at Salt Lake City, dedicated to the birds. from the (UP) -- just an- LOW KIDDER FOR RELIEF No Federal Funds To Be Used, Says Gifford (UP) Un- trans-Pacif- ic the lonely islet off Siberia, American aviators Don Moyle and Cecil A. Allen reported by radio today that they intended to take off from Navarin island for Nome, possibly today. Moyle sent a message from the Russian steamer, Buriat today to the Asahi newspapers here stating that the flight will be continued as soon as weather permits. The report, telling of their fight against treacherous storms and winds over the north Pacific, related for the first time how they arrived at Navarin island, near Cape Navarin, far off the Great Circle route they had planned to follow. Moyle and Allen flew through storms for 34 hours after leaving Sabishiro beach, 275 miles from Tokio, Moyle said. They were forced down on an uninhabited, unnamed island. Waiting until the storm abated, they took off again and headed northwestward, finally being forced down by lack of fuel at Maino Pirgino, near Cape you pass Mayor Curley's red brick residence on Jamaica way, to observe an indestructible shamrock hanging in each window. When you visit Boston, secure if possible on your explorations, the companionship of Police Lieutenant ODea. Two police motorcycles go ahead of him, traffic and obstacles melt Trailer, Uncoupled, away. If Dante had had such a Struck By Auto guide in place of Virgil, he would have seen paradise purA truck owned by the gatory, and the infernal recompany with Satan at the bot- demolished a trailer gions. belonging to tom in half a day. Richard Jensen, Thursday afternoon, Boston police are Jensen was traveling north their revolvers on the carrying outside the state highway south in a belt. A gun In a hip along of Logan when the trailer on to pocket, hard draw, makes it his car became uncoupled and easy for the criminal to shoot ran across the road directly in first- Other cities should adopt front of the truck. The impact that plan. threw the truck into a borrow pit without damage. Is Colo-Anima- l King Asks Silver Stabilizing On Coast Sept. 18 (UP) Confidence that public and private agencies throughout the country will be able to take care relief this of unemployment winter without appropriation of was federal funds expressed today by Walter S. Gifford, director of President Hoovers organization on unemployment relief. He made the statement in opening the meeting here of the committee on mobilization of relief sources headed by Owen D. Young. TO Aip IN LOCAL MONEY RAISING Both Gifford and Young emphasized that their purpose is not to raise a national fund, but only to aid local money raising to take care of- the unemployed. Our aim is to be of wide service to communities in their task of meeting the burden placed UDon them by unemployment whatever that burden may be, Gifford said. This organisation is not conducting a drive, for a national fund. Existing agencies in the United States and the various communities demonstrated effectively last wihter tneir ability to cope with the situation then before them and are planning to do so again. WASHINGTON. was accepted late yesterday by the state department of public' works for the building of thfl new Blackfoot asylum. Nina firms bid- - INACCEPTABLE YORK, Sept- 18. (U.R) Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt's views on prohibition make NEW - him just as inacceptabie to dry Democrats as a presidential candidate as was Alfred Bishop James Cannon, Jr., of the Methodist Episcopal church, South, said last night on his arrival from Europe. RANCHER DIES MULHALL, Okla., Sept. 18. (U.R) Col. Zack famous Mulhall, Oklahoma ranchman and showman, died at his home here GRAF ON WAY MARSEILLES. France, Sept. 18. The Graf Zeppelin was proceeding to Brazil exactly on schedule today, a wireless message from the ship stated. It is the second flight to Brazil in a fortnight. DENIES HOAX TACOMA, Wash., Sept. 18. Rumors DENVER, Colo., Sept. 18 (UP) The long planned Dotsero cutoff, to link the main lines of the Denver and Salt Lake railroad and the Denver and Rio Grande western, may become an actuality before winter. Tne interstate commerce commission yesterday granted approval of construction of the cut-of- f, long delayed by legal battles, and it was reported that bids for the building of the cut-of- f. at an estimated cost of $3 000, 000 might be asked by Oct. 1, with construction to start almost immediately afterward. Under the I. C. C. ruling, work on the project must start, by March 15, 1932, and end by September, 1933, but the railroads involved were said to be desirous of rushing the work to completion. be will Strong pressure brought in an effort to force contractors who construct the cut-o- ff to employ only Colorado labor. t'.R that the attempted of Don Allen was a hoax were scored by John Buf-feli- n, Tacoma capitalist who backed the flight. trans-Pacif- ic Moyle TO BE PUSHED Pittman of Nevada Key and William IX. King, of Utah, joined 'traders of the pacific area shipping, business and industry in addressing the last days sessions of the convention. PASCO, Wash., Sept. 18 (UP) The arid, sandy miniature an attractive Noahs Ark for a quilting pattern are contained in of Washington together with delegates fro.m Idaho and Oregon, joined here late yesterday In the greatest convention the league had ever held. All had one idea in mind getting irrigation water on the parched land. adopted They unanimously the Washington state chamber of commerce resolution, urging "passage by congress of bills authorizing and adopting the Columbia river basin project as a whole and providing for imas a mediate construction, means of relief of unemployment, in such units as may be advisable in view of general agricultural and economic conditions. Support of whatever plan is presented to congress by the war department and the department of the interior was pledged by United States Senators C. C. Dill and Wesley L. Jones, and flight Cecil ADMITS ROBBERY SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 18. (PR) William Spates, who admit- T SALT LAKE CITY. Sept- 18. rail- - While the nations roads endeavored to obtain a 15 per cent railroad freight rate increase, Utah's central drouth committee made a formal apcut peal requesting railroadsontolivein two existing rates stock leaving the state and into feed coming livestock Utah. The committee set forth that Utah has been sorely stricken by drouth and needs immediate relief. Livestock, it claimed, must have the benefit of reduced rates on Stockers and feeder cattle and sheep sent outside the state. The same applies to imported feeds. The mergency rates should be made effective immediately and last until April ) tedly has spent much of his life behind prison bars, faced a gruelling 'cross examinatior to- 1. day after his startling admisTelegrams endorsing the comsion in Federal court that he mittees action were sent by committed the $56,000 Nobel Governor George H. Dern to train robbery. the Western Trunk Line association and the western repreSILVER APPEAL sentative of the transportation NEW YORK, Sept. 18. (U.R) at committee freight bureau A project to restore silver as Chicago, HI. the basic money throughout the also sent The committee world has been outlined by copies of its petition to the Former Walter committees Congressman drouth county Lafferty, in an appeal address- through the state. ed to the American Legion and the American federation of BANDIT CAUGHT TROY, Kan., Sept- 18. (U.W Eagerness of a man identifying himself as Russell Morgan, 23, San Francisco, to swim the Missouri river and his inability to do, led him today to the county jail, where he was held as a confessed bank bandit. DAI LAS, Tex., Sept. 13' (UP) How certain pretty steno- graphers allegedly dated up their married employers then blackmailed them intrigued po- the complete pattern. This bo published Saturday and will be followed by the will quilting pattern. From then until completion, a pattern will be carried every Monday. Wednesday and Saturday. Save the patterns and if you are not able to start at once, put them for use at a later date. Completed, the quilt makes an extremely attractive and yet very unique them away design. Dont forget! Be sure and watch the Herald-Journand get the patterns al Del., Sept. 18. Prisoners, headed by the notorious bandit who looted the Clover dairy several years ago, revolted In the workshop of the workhouse Newcastle county at noon today. One guard, Anthony B. Hay den, and one prisoner, Clarence Cole, were shot and seriously wounded, and 14 life term and long term convicts escaped. Two of them were recaptured two hours later several miles WILMINGTON, (U.R) from the state penal Determined to keep her Boston bull pups out of the dirt after their baths, Afton Davies of Salt Lake City, Utah, resorted to a clothes line, a few sugar acks and a new Idea And here they are, hung'up to dry, as Miss Davies fastens the last clothes pin. lice today. The president of the Tired Business Men's Association, indicted by the county grand jury on a charge of embezzling from a typist, was believed to know the details. The scheme, police explained, was this: The man got jobs for stenographers on condition,-fhe- y would sign contracts with him agreeing to go on parties with their employers and demand money later un eventualities oj. misconduct they were to ed Institu- tion. Offic'als said Cole was the ringleader of the outbreak. Cole was recaptured outside the prison walls after he had been wounded in the shoulder by a guard. He was serving 18 years for banditry and was brought to the prison a few days ago from Wilmington. Most of the escaped men were long term prisoners- Authorities charged a prisoner known as Sellers, also a long termer held for banditry, with Haydens shooting. Where the prisoners obtained the pistols and their other weapons was a mystery. General rioting marked the escape, the most spectacular ln the institution's hlstot4"' Conference In Cache Stake This Week End OV Grampaw Ned Oakley Writes Speakers To' Represent S. L. Authorities Announced Cache stake quarterly conference will be held Saturday evening Sunday In the Logan tabernacle. The priesthood session will be held at 7:30 p. m. Saturday; general conference meetings at 10 a. m. and 2 p. m. Sunday; and the joint stake M. I. A. assembly at 7:30 p. m. Sunday. Bishop David A. 'Smith, of the presiding bishopric and Hugh J. Cannon, editor of The Improvement Era, publication of the Mutual Improvement associations of the church, will be present to represent the general authorities of the church. President Joseph E. Cardon announced Friday morning. Editor Cannon will be the speaker at the joint Mutual gathering Sunday evening, and may also be a speaker at the afternoon session of the conference. Bishop Smith will attend both the Sunday morning and afternoon gatherings. The Tenth ward choir will furnish music for the general conference meetings. Special musical numbers for the Sunday evening service are being arranged by officers of the Y. M. M. I. A. and the Y. L. M. I. A., according to Superintendents Alma Sonne and Bessie Pack. ad PUNKIN CORNERS, September 18 Editor The llerald-Journa- l: Dear Sir an Brother: Well, I see where Aimee had Semple McPherson I knowed when married. Ma Kennedy got herself hitched, something like this would happen. Aimee aint to let Ma get ahead of her, no sirree Bab! Th blushin bride wore a chic little Eugenie hat (no marriage is legal these days unless th bride wears a Eugenie hat), an th affair was shrouded in th greatest secrecy, there bein no outsiders present except a couple of dozen newspaper reporters an publicity men. Sister Aimces weddin was in heralded in headlines every paper in th United States, an only one thing was lacking to make it th biggest story of th year Aimee wasn't married to the What a prince of Wales. whale of a yarn that would have been. Best wishes to th happy m bride. GRAMPAW NED OAKLEY. Poultry Meeting Of FAMILY HAS Central Cache Set WHOLESALE Poultry producers of the Hyde MARRIAGES Park. North Logan, Smithfield, - self-styl- This shows one row of the Noah's Ark quilt pattern which will be carried bein the Herald-Journa- l, ginning Saturday. ..!! uir.ds of animals with wastes eastern Washington need irrigation water, and the Columbia basin irrigation league has united in the demand that definite preparations to provide it be started immediately. of residents of Thousands eastern, central and southern IDENTITY LAST coigressmenSamEr Hilland Sept. 18 (UPf' Identity of an unknown rob- representing industry on the ber who was ground to death west side of the mountains, Sam under the heavy trucks of a H. Hedges, of the state chamfreight train, was sought today ber of commerce, and Lieut. by authorities. Gov. John H. Gellatly. Members of the house comASKS CONFERENCE on irrigation and remittee 18 LONDON, Sept. (UP) attended the mass clamation Lord Hunsdon announced today meeting and generally indicated he would submit to the house their support of the program. of lords on Sept. 30 a motion requesting the government to confer immediately with members of the British empire and the United States on the desirability of dealing with the silver problem to increase the purchasing power of a large portion of the world. 25. I During,Fight IDAHO FALLS, are already in existence, but also those now being formed to deal with unemployment this winter. Gifford emphasized there is to be no campaign for a national fund and explained that communities throughout- - t h s country already have perfected plans to raise money, which is to be administered and disNEW PRESIDENT tributed by these communities PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 18. themselvr.s. (UR) Charles D. Livingston, He said his committee, sixinsurance comteen members of which attend- Michigan state was elected presi- ed the session today, would fur- missioner, dent of the National Association nish tbpa national barkmimd of Insurance Commissioners last local campaigns to be for night at the concluding session staged between Oct. 19 and Nov. of their convention. Two Shot In Eastern County .Workshop Place Project At Meeting NEW BUILDING BOISE, Idaho, Sept- 18. u.r i The Gooding Plumbing & Heating comanys bid of $131,900 OAKLAND. Cal.. Sept. 18 (UP) Revision of tariff barriers to stimulate foreign trade and stabilization of silver to restore purchasing power of half the world s population were urged by speakers today at the eighth annual convention of the pacific foreign trade council. Two United States senators. Columbia Basin Group - ganizations and agencies throughout the country, which 18. and Payette county was Brownbltuli-thPennypacker, Buhl. For concrete the bid was $88, 489.50 and for warrenite, Blli PROJECT - 4 TOKIO, sept. BOISE, Idaho, Sept. 18. (UR) Low bidder for paving 3.353 miles of the old Oregon Trail from New Plymouth, west 4n ic other working man out of work, started out today to look again for a job. his last dollar in his pocket. Three negro thugs set upon him. He fought with them. One of them fired. The thugs fled as a motorist who had seen what was happening drove up. LOCAL CAMPAIGN f Sorgeloos lay dead, a bul'ct DATES ARE SET This organization will in no through the heart. In one hand was clenched his last $1 bill. way disturb these activities, but on the contrary., It is designed to be helpful not only to or- daunted by stprms that ended their flight on a PRESS UNITED - CHICAGO, Sept. 13 C. Sorgeloos, 55, v LONG TERM Flashes , Peter OiCTl and Benson district will meet at the Hyde Park school house Monday at 8 p. m. Erastus Lamb of Hyde Park, president of the district poultry association, wull be in charge. Poultry account records will be discussed and those interested keeping records on their poultry flocks will be given information' and books so they can get started on the record keeping project by October 1st. in All pouitrymen interested this phase of work are urged to be present and will be given the privilege of cooperating if they desire. Carl Frischknecht, extension poultry specialist of the college. wriJl explain this project and counfy agent R. L. Wngley will also be in Father .daughter, and entered bonds of matrimony at the county court house Thursday afsister- -in-law ternoon. appeared before County Clerk C- V. Mohr with Lester Lee, 25, for a marriage license. Her father Alma Pratt, 52, and Ellen M. his sister-in-laAlien Pratt, a widow, were issued the next license in the record book. Mrs. Pratt gave her address as Kimberly, Idaho; the others reside in Hepburn, Idaho. Clerk Mohr performed both marriage ceremonies. Amy Pratt, 17, - RICHMOND Mrs. Maude Thereasa Hill Bair, wife of George E. Bair of Richmond, died Thursday night in a Logai hospital of complications which followed a ruptured appendix. Funeral services will be held in the Richmond South ward chapel Monday at 2 p. m. Interment will be in the Richmond cemetery. Mrs. Bair was bom in' Smith-fiel- d. November 11, 1880, the daughter of William H. and Isabelle D. Hill. The family moved to Richmond when she was a small girl and resided here since that time. She was married to George E. Bair in January, 1905, at the Logan temple. Mrs. Bair was known as a capable and efficient home maker, a devoted mother and faithful church worker. She did some work in the primary and was a class leader in the ward Relief society at the time of her death. Surviving are Mr. Bair and the following children: Clen-don- e, Earl. Delbert, IsaBlaine and Keith Two Richmond. dead. Two sisters. Mrs. Lottie Hodgson and Mrs. Louise Egan of Richmond, and one brother, Walter Hill of Hyrum, also survive. Hilda, belle. Louise, Bair, all of children are NEW YORK, Sept. 18 (UP) The stock market today experienced one of the widest breaks in a year. Prices shot down 1 to 12 points. London stocks broke sharply, leading securities losing 64.000.000 pounds sterling in Amsterdam valuation. prices reacted. Cotton futures made new lows since 1904. Grains declined for the day. Selling in stocks was general. Reports had It that banks and insurance companies were unGerman loading weak stocks. bonds had another severe setback as did railroad bonds. Bit Finger: Divorced for c divorce recently filed here by Florence McFarland Hooser were that her husband, Robert when angry. H bit her fingers : MEMPHIS. ti Ri Grounds UTAH Unsettled tonight and Saturday, probably showers extreme porton: warmer southwest portion tonight-IDAHProbably showers tonight; mild temperature. |