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Show Todays News- The HeraM Journal Help Utah Aggies defeat Utah on Thanksgiving Day. Join the Bailey slush fund. Page four, column one- - What Folks Say Anyone who takes lecturing seriously should be very careful Erwin' Ed- -; of his grammar. man. With which are combined the Cache Valley Daily Herald, the Daily Herald and The Journal Volume 22. Number 2G8. LOGAN, UTAH, MONDAY, NOVEMBER Higher Taxes Today y ;! FIVE O'CLOCK EDITION l. Price 5 Cents. h Japanese Gain More Territory rp tp cp cp (Copyright, 1931) Same War God,' New Face. F LASHES Red Petticoats, Good. Meteor Showers. Men Had 10 1 a By Arthur Brisbane If Ten 16. HI from the Bil- lions. -- i UNITED A PRESS , behsoii ID AND .!' PATRIARCH IS i PLEAD NOT GUILTY .SANTA MONICA, Calif., Nov. 16. iiU!) C. Van Leavitt, 57, The god of war has changed his face, appearing now with a different kind of frown, eyes slanting upward at the corners. He is an Asiatic, but the same old sod. brother-in-la- fftrbert ManchurianWar Head To MUKDEN, Manchuria, Nov. 16 (UP) The Japanese army fought its way to within striking distance of Anganchi today after a combined artillery, infantry and bombing plane attack smashed through Chinese forced on the Nonni river from. Extensive fighting in the Nonni sector was resumed shortly after dawn, Japanese reports from the war zone said. The opposing armies were engaged over a wide front south of Anganchi, the key to Chinese General Ma Clian-Shadefense of Tsitsihar, which" is within the Soviet sphere of influence. five-yea- themlf When you hear of people being killed, they are usually Chinese, fifty here, a hundred there. Oeneral Japan, fifteen Russia. Mah, a Chinese who most anxious to fight is said to have ieceived carloads of aims from i Russia will not get nto a war if she can help it. She is busy, and feels like an Italian image vendor with forty plaster statues on a board balanced on tils head. But Russia will fight if she must. China was buying silver in London yesterday; probaWy getting ready to hire some moreif tldiers. You must pay them they fight. The Empress Eugenie hat is (kad. Too many ladies looking out of one eye, under the brim, Women killed that fashion. want to be different." According to one fashion writer, red flannel petticoats, such as Euof genie wore, but shorter, course, and tighter, will be fashionable for a while. That is good news. Women freezing themselves injure their vitality, starving themselves they reduce vitality. Starving AND freezing they can't stand- - Perhaps didnt you know that it is fashionable to have your toenails polished, and dyed a bright red, green' or blue, wear-to ing sandals without stockings, make the toenails visible. That is fashionable, in certain places, and it is to continue. Thats queer, but better than dyeing your teeth black. 8ome savage women do that. ' for out Next week, look showers of meteors, during the first four aays. The ancient Mayans believed that the meteors were falling hairs on the head of The Lord of the dead, Tzontamocque. We stones know them as heavy striking our atmosphere, melting because of their high speed, nnd usually harmless. No one Insures against them, but one MIGHT destroy the biggest building on earth. w 4, is short, may find it Sales Tax Is Easiest Way To Increase WASHINGTON.. Nov. 16 (UP) Senator Smoot', Republican, Utah, who is chairman of the . Idaho, November 20. The purpose of the conference is to propose possible revisions in tax schedules. R. E. Shepard, president of the Idaho Chamber of Commerce, issued the call through the Association Secretary, Parsons- Mr. Parsons calls attention to the fact that the situation is critical in view of the fact that 300 school districts are unable to finance more than five of six months of school this year. This, he claims, speaks for great in the taxation inequalities scheme. The group alms to prepare suggestive legislation for the 19331 legislature. LEAH SKIES 1 PEACE aEAAI IISAC In a talk dent body DREISER CHARGED MIDDLEBORO, Ky., Nov. 16. to Dos Theodore Dreiser and John prominent authors, and eight others were today indicted by a Kentucky grand, jury on charges of criminal syndiPassos, calism. WHEAT DECREASE (U.R) 16. ROME. Nov. Go Easy On Recovery Efforts BY RAYMOND CLAPPER United Press ( orrespondent. Copyright 1931 by United Press) BOSTON. Nov 16 (UP) The Atlantic seaboard, industrial and financial nerve center of America, may be compared to a convalescent during his first- attempts to get out of bed.This was revealed in a week of inquiry into business centers whose leaders ranged from the "restrained optimists of Philadelphia to those rubbing hands in New .York in anticipation of bigger business to The Australian wheat crop was estimated by the International come. On October 5 the patient wonInstitute of Agriculture today why he was allowed to t 170,000.000 bushels, a de- dered crease of 20 per cent from the live- - Prices reached the bottomactual 1930 crop. Area under most point of two dark years-MANTHINGS Cultivation was placed at ARE STIMULANT acres. BY FREDERICK KUH Then the doctors told him he United Press Correspondent.' FIGHT ENDS was getting better if he only World copyright, 1931, by the f' United Press; all rights reserv?, ST. ANTHONY, Idaho, Nov. knew it. The Hoover $500,000,-00- 0 l" bank credit pool proved aned reproduction prohibited. I J8. (t.Hi An early morning fight with officers end-- y other stimulant. The Home TSITSIHAR, Manchuria, Nov: when Spencer Financing Bank Plan also helpfell to ntthe ground ed. With a few pats of 1931 free-fbr-al- , mmaw-bTOra- in North Manchuria, went out to assume personal direction of warfare against the Japanese today with a declaration that he would fight until the last man had fallenWrapped in a great, military clock, General Ma received me at his headquarters and outlined his policies a few minutes before he departed on a dash to the scene of battle on the Nonni sector, a few miles South of Anganchi As I talked with this short, slender military leader, whose stubborn opposition to the Japanese has led to grave complications in Manchuria, he was constantly receiving reports of the fighting 30 miles away. Despite the gravity of the miliGeneral Ma tary situation. spoke with fatalistic calm as he drove home four points: 1. That Japan ls beginning a great offensive" which may result in the bombing of Tsitsihar. 2. That the Chinese are not strong enough to fight, but we must hold our ground until - ed death. 3. That the Chinese have not been aided and do not want the 5 . TALK . , Patient Must (U.R) A grand Jury today indicted Mr. and Mrs. Harry N. Riley on k charge of maltreatment and torture of Edith Riley, the girl alleged to have been held a prisoner in a closet for several years. Mrs. Riley is the child's stepmother. . finance committee ..wbep PRESTbfP '' Thomas' Heath; control 'the senate, said today that congress would manager of the local sugar enact. this winter legislation to factory, and Edwin Crockett, increase taxespresident of the local chamber Smoot said he was not con- of commerce, have been named convinced as to the method of in- delegates to bea taxpayers Boise. held at creased taxation but he men- vention to tioned the sales tax, sponsored also by Senator Reed, Republican, Pennsylvinia, as the easiest and surest way of raising our revenue In my opinion a small tax on ultimate sales would be absorbed by the seller of the goods rather than being passed on the Consumer, Smoot said. If the income tax is amended no doubt the greater' incomes will have to bear most of the burden. Smoot, in talking with the newspapermen today, urged econ omy, opposed cancellation of war debts, advocated sliver relief, and adoption of President Hoovers economic relief measures. In letters and telegrams. Smoot said, I am receiving the subject of the sales tax is being considered by people who in the past were opposed to it. It may be possible to secure passage of the sales tax, but I am not yet prepared to say that the senate would agree to it. JURY INDICTS WASHINGTON, Nov. 16. LEWISTON liam Waddoups, 00 U. S. Income which ninety per cent of the pressions without having their worlds people cannot possibly country effect on the other nations of have any, it is interesting to the world reflect that three Americans, Dr. W. L. Wanlass, who has Mellon', Ford and Rockefeller, recently returned 'from a four are probably each worth a bil- months tour of Europe in the lion. If they chose to demand interests of international regold, that would give each one lations. introduced the a tenth of the worlds total sup-- . and outlined the purposesspeakers of the ply. Suppose ten men actually Carnegie Endowment as prohad it all. What then? moting peace on a definite basis and to bring people toBORAH BOOM gether through discussion of their common interests. POCATELLO, Idaho. Nov. 16 A club of all student and Wilof Admirers Senator (UP) in faculty members inte-cste- d liam E. Borah, progressive Re- the discussion of international were busily engaged relations was formed at the publican another college at the close of the meetitoday in starting Borah for President Boom. ng. . ' 3 Senator Reed Smoot given before the stuof the Utah State college on Monday. necessary to import fifty million Agricultural Jones of the bushels of wheat. Fortunately Amy Hemingway Endowment for Peace she can pay (or It easily. In Carnegie peace could be the past week her gold supply declared that on public was increased by three billion built only She intelligent illustrated the opinion hum taken United the francs, influence that puo-ll- c states., All those francs amount tremendous opinion could have on the to only $117,250,000, but eveiy outcome of world problems and little helps. college people had a And as there is only ten and stated that big part to perform in the esa half billion dollars worth of tablishment of peace. gold In the world, our French Dr. Elbert Thomas of the friends may, eventually, get it University of Utah, who accomall. panied Miss Jones to Logan, explained the independence of inadeworld's the Concerning countries upon each other and we of are what quate supply showed that prosperity or deof call real to money, pleased could not exist in one France Fight To End Russia says: I am' the one that Is attacked. My feelings are hurt. The Japanese are tryr plan. ing to ruin my May the ghosts of Karl Marx and and Lenin haunt destroy 6eems CALLED HOME President Hoover, and C. R. Dail- ey. a Santa Monica grocery Store proprietor, today pleaded not guilty to charges of possession of liquor. Japan says: China attacked me, cruelly v wrongfully, when I wasnt doing anything at all. China says: "Thats the way the wolf talked to the baby lamb in the fable when he wanted an excuse to eat it. How could we attack Japan when we are so busy attacking each ether? o of w SALT LAKE CITY, Nov. 16 (UP i Bright sunshine today aid of Soviet Russia. 4. That the Chinese want the League of Nations to intervene. ended a short but extensive L snowstorm that blanketed Utah F and neighboring states with snow Sunday and today. Weather I'orecasts today indicated that northern Nevada and central and northern Idaho would probably be pelted with more snow today end tomorrow. PRESTON Dale, the is r'?r .1 B'd the dist'irh-.nicdaughter of Mr. and solar as Utah arid southern Idaho are concerned, it vas said. Mrs- - L- - R Atkinson of FrankAirmail planes were giounded lin. was painfully burned Saturlast night but most of them re- day when she fell into a bonsumed their regular schedule fire. The accident occurred while todaychildren were playing the fire. Dale stumbled in some weeds. Her clothes fire and before she could caught M. I. A. be rescued, much of her body was burned. Preston physicans were called and considerable hope is given PLANNED for her recovery, although she is reported to be very serious. -- . . three-year-o- ld - SHOW The Logan stake M. I. A. Road show will be held this season December 15 and 16. This decision was made Sunday at a meeting of the stake and ward Mutual Improvement association officers gathered m monthly assembly in the First ward chapel. Each of the ward mutuals will contribute an act to the show, and the stake M- I. A. general board will furnish a number, N. D. Salisbury, stake superintendent of the Young Men's Mutual Improvement association, announced Monday morn- Red Cross Meeting I n Richmond Tonight annual RICHMOND. 4 The meeting of the local chapter of the Red Cross organization will be held Monday evening at 8 A oclock in the club roomgood representation from all tire clubs and organisations in the city is urgently requested according to Dr. J. M. Godfrey, chairman. The purpose of the meeting is to reorganize, and to outline the annual drive tor membership. It is also th$ purpose of the meeting to discuss the coning. Further details will be work- tinuation of the heiilth project ed out within the next few which was begun lfcst year m connection with the schools. days. - - Powell, Patriarch Wil- years of age the oldest resident of Lewiston, died at his home Saturday afternoon at 4 oclock of general Funeral services will debility. be held Tuesday at 2 p. m. in the Lewiston First ward chapelMr. Waddoups was born August 19, 1840, to Thomas and Elizabeth Porter Waddoups at Souw Warrickshire, England. He with immigrated from England his parents seventy-on- e years ago and settled in Bountiful, Utah, later coming to Lewiston. He married Martha Page, 1863. at Salt Lake, they having six children, five of which are living: Thomas Waddoups, Swan Louisa Mrs. Rawlins, Lake; Amalga; William Waddoups, Jr and Mrs. Philo Austin of Juniper, Idaho; and Mrs. Martha Van Orden, Lewiston. He married his second' wife, Eliza Jane Stephenson In Salt Lake City in 1883 in the Endowment House. They had fourteen children, eight of whom d are living: Hattie, Horace, and Victor Waddoups, of Lewiston; Ivan Waddoups of Dayton: Mrs. Verda Peterson, Bancroft; Mrs. Lulu Egbert, Preston and Mrs. Rollo Woodward, Logan. He has also surviving, the foland sisters: lowing brothers Thomas and Mark Waddoups, 81 Truck Skids Passing1 Car, Ends In Pit ay . Wil-for- .WoarisMnwhgjuML-Mrf- c- -- Thomas ht INJURIES FATAL PROVO, Nov. 16. (U.PJ- -ln juries sustained late last night when he was struck down by a car driven by Hughes Curtis, 27, Springville, proved fatal early prices made striking gains. Then the knees began to today to Howard E. King, 49. shake a little. Mustnt try to CONTINUE INVESTIGATION go too fast- Takes a little time YELLOW PINE, Idaho, Nov. to build up flabby muscles. (U.R) 16 Mining men continued Have to take it gradually. You an investigation today into the have been a sick man and youll tunnel cave-i- n in the Antimony have to go easy for a while. mine which snuffed out the TEXTILE INDUSTRY lives of D. W. Hope, 50, Boise IS STEADIER and Sam Hancock, 60, Saturday That's where we are now. night. been New has England steadied by the textile industry CRITICAL TEST which went through much of Nov. 16 (UP) The its PARIS, readjustment before the decouncil of the League of Nacould therefore pression. tions convened today for its meet the Itchanged conditions final effort to prevent war in more than many critical other satisfactorily Manchuria, the most industries. test the league has ever faced. Consumer demand both in textiles and shoes lias been the ONLY A PAWN some LOS ANGELES, Nov. 16 (UP) brightest factor, through to ac- recent due curtailment Sensational testimony that stocks has taken Eunice Pringle. dan- cumulating place. was as a pawn in a used cer, plot to obtain money from Alexander Pantages. theater millionaire, was heard today at Pantages retrial on a charge of attacking the dancer. a High Priest on July 5, as Bishop, June 30, 1901; as counselor of Benson Stake, November 5, 1905; as Patriarch of the Benson' Stake on October 23, 1921, and was active until the past two and a half years. Since the death of his wives several years ago, Mr. Waddoups has been living at the home of his daughter, Hattie Waddoups. 1865; 1884; - NEW YORK. Nov. 16. (U.R) . - 1 doups. ONEIDA -- w of Centerville. V Sixty-eiglike a new man and leaped out Page grandchildren and seventy-eiof bed. great grandchildren alThis is going to be nothing ght at all, he thought as he ' took so survive. Mr. Waddoups was very promhis first confident steps-Whein church activities. He and cotton began inent shooting upward. Wall Street was ordained a Seventy, July 1, special officer. The lives of four Cephe county firemen were placed in jeopar-da- y Monday morning through' failure to give them the right-of-was they sped northward on the state highway towards a blazing frame house at Lewiston. - Elmer Lawrence and Dick Burleigh are in the hospital us the result of the truck being forced out of the snow cleared ruts while the driver, William Jensen, and one other fireman, Captain Andrew Otterbeck, escaped without injury, The truck was answering a call at the home of Abner Van Orden, in Lewiston, one block . north of the bank comer. Just," after passing Richmond, the speeding truck, which weighs several tons, approached a car driven by Harold Hansen of, Long Beach, Calif. According to the report of. Eire Cheif C. W, Rapp, the truck, was. unable to get around the cover i car on the slippery,-snoed road and went out of control. It finally end pp In the. borplt, H. ccgqpletely. tajrojKl, , t' around. Lawrence and Burleigh were riding on the rear of the trade " and were' badly bruised as the rear end swung around. Bur- leigh suffered muscle injuries the neck and right snoulder while Lawrence pulled the car-- -' tilege of his left knee loose and ..h ,c may have other injuries.The ambulance was called and took the luiured men toil-Logan where tney are at Cache Valley hospital. Ti-'- v truck was being polled Y Vu the road later In the aftt, A second truck was sen, . and reached the scene of fire at Lewiston safely. ,1. . home, a frame structure,, wa badly damaged with tire, and, water although the exact ex- tent of the damages Is STAKE PRESTON President Rudger Clawson of Salt Lake City was ttle speaker at the Oneida Stake conference. It was a Priesthood DRIVES READY t conference. Each group of the Priesthood were assigned definite parts on the program. A radio amplifier added greatly the conference as the words every speaker were clearly audible. President Taylor Nel- to presided at the conference Robert A. Leishman of Wells-- -, ville. has announced that the Wellsville district of the Amer-t- o lean Red Cross is well or-- of ganized for the 1931 Roll Call; Mr. Leishman .was the chair-so- n man last year and feels con- - '. fident that the funds for the sessions. The M. I. A. Conference was benefit of the Wellsville peo- - ' devoted to the Word of Wisdom Pe will be much larger thhi theme and in addition they dis- - year than they were last. Mr. Leishman is. cashier of played a very instructive exhibit in the Petterborg Nash the Wellsville bank in Addition to being local chairman of the show rooms. Red Cross, and his bank is authorized to accept all Rea IRISH CIVIL WAR DUBLIN, Nov. 16 lUP) The Cross funds. All Wellsville peotension of civil war days has ple are urged to take theli relumed to Ireland after a dec- memberships or contributions home to Mr. Leishman within tha ade of progress under few days . rule. Through the streets of next B M. Thompson, mayor-eleDublin constantly ride patrols of armed soldiers. Others, with of Hyrum and chairman of the district of the American bayonets fixed, stand alert at Hyrum the entrance to the dail. Night Red Cross announces that Hyfor ' and day the homes of high gov- rum is making arrangements 1931 ernment officials are under the American Red Cross Roll Call, and he is confident guard- Deputies on the way to will make a parliament were given escoi Is. that his district splendid showing. The funds from Hyriuiv will remain at Hyrum under the ; supervision of the Hyrum committee and for the sole benefit jof Hyrum people, and all peo- -l pie in the Hyrifm 'district are urged to see Mr- - Thompson. terest in markets turned wheat again today and that commodity spurted more than 2 cents a bushel, taking other grains up with it while stocks reacted fract.ons to 4 points and silver futures made the maximum drop of 3 cents per- by the New York futures The tentative 1932 schedule md-teof courts of honor for the Lo- - market- Mor? than a do',n made new gan district of the Cache Val- - lows ley council. Boy Scouts, was them for many years, half of records. The majority presented Sunday to the troop committee chairman and scout- - were in the railroad group, masters of the district by S. Others were furnished by arid v. Prows, district court of hon- or chairman panics interested in it. H:gh Erade industrials slipped Under this schedule the nextcourt of honor will be held over; silver shares broke on the Sunday evening, January 10, in drP in silver metal; harvester the Sixth ward chapel, under and mail order issues rose with the auspices of Troop 9 of that, wheat, coppers and oils ct sag-war- d. Se Clouds Cheat Astronomers Of Periodical Sky Performance Nov. PASADENA, Calif., (UP) One of the greatest me-- 1 teoric displays of the century. awaited for 33 years by astron- 16, omers, went unbbserved on the coast because cloudy weather prevented a clear view the heavens. Although they used aeroplanes in an effort to find a clear sky. astronomers of the Mt. Wilson observatory here, were thwarted when they flew as far east as Salt Lake City without find- heavens lng a break in the j . through which they could w, it. h tween midnight and dawn on on the Leonides in their periodmal ll)e morning of Nov. 13 and ex.succeeding days to a lesser visit of the earth. , Dr' paui Merrill of the Mt. The Leonide shower is per-haps the most important ever Wilson observatory, accompa-Facifiviewed by astronomers, because nied by a photographer and it occurs so infrequently. Since newspapermen, flew to souh-o- f Nevada and Utah in hope the year 931 it has been ob.seiv-'er- n ed. but only during the past they would find an unobstruct century has it become defiivtp .ed sky where the meteors could ly established that the shower be observed, occurs every 33 years. The Leonides gain their names Astronomers had computed from the fact that the shower that the display was clue to originates in the consteilatio-- of be seen in this hemisphere be - Leo. c ' i i The Weather 4 UTAH Fair southwest, unsettled north and east tonight and Tuesday; snow or rain southeast portion tonight; colder south portion tonight. IDAHO Unsettled tonight and Tuesday; probably snow or '..' rain; temperature below nor- . mal., Maximum temperature Sun-- J -- d day, 53; one year ago, 56. last Minimum temperature night, 29; one year ago, 30. , -- . , |