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Show The Today's News On the Herald-Journeditorial page today. The real issue. Volume 23. J Herald-Journ-al DOC Number 32. 1932) HONORED All For The Best, Per- haps. Local Banker To Work With (in nip Movie Success Secrets. Cal. -- In San SAN SIMEON, Francisco, on the north, and Eos Angeles on the south, Chinese begin quietly and mournfully their of Chinas ninq day celebration New Year. No firecrackers popping, horns blowing, cymbals clashing, to celebrate the day, and frighten evil Instead, mournful readspirits. (if war bulletins, denunciation ing of Japan by young Chinese. Ac old, Chinese merchant in Los Angeles says Things are very bad, out; women and children weep all day. SETTLEMENT Defenders Ordered To Shoot Down Any Invaders (Copyright) has been taken, by the Japanese, as matter of fact, the iYarbin BY UNITED murder, in cold blood of civilian Chinese, captured by Japanese solThe mystery of Chinese diers. prisoners taken by the Japanese, lias been cleared up in a horrible maiiner by the finding of the terribly bayonetted, nude bodies of thirteen Chinese in a Japanese flour mill, evacuated Thursday by Japanese sailors and civilian guards. Where are the bodies of olhqr nrisoners taken by the Japanese, during the past week. Remembering the big war, with its . hideous, false stories of dren mutilated by German chil- s, etc., allowance will be made war hysteria, and false ru- - Perhaps the Chinese, celebrating their new year in sorrow, can find comfort in looking ahead. Many countries have been helped by invasion. It was a good thing for Gqu), now France, that Ceasar weqt there, good for Britain that took poses-sioi- i, ... William the conqueror good for America that the whites . came in, good for Texas, California, etc., that they became part of the United States, instead , of remaining Mexican. The four to five hundred mil liou Chinese will absorb, in time, the. .sixty or seventy million lapa- nese, as England absorbed Williams Normans, as modern New York absorbed the Dutch ancients, as the Italian peninsula has abthe sorbed, and made Italian, hordes of Germanic invaders the name their Longbeards that gave to Lombardy, and all the other barbarians. Japan Is a business nation, un derstanding organization and modhe will organize ern methods. industry and agriculture ip Manchuria, suppress banditry, permit the natives to live and work in peace, and permit them to buy goods from other countries. industrious, 3he Chinese are honest, ahle. The corning of foreigners will not mean that their country will be taken from them Four or five hundred million beings cannot be crowded out. Japan will find, IN ASIA the room that she needs for expansion. In any case, it is not Ol IK business. jj Young people with their minds and ambitions turned toward this coast, and the Hollywood movies, are warned not to come now, unless they can bring money enough they to, take care of them, while seek an opening for their talent. Alfred Suntell, one of the ablest moving picture directors, which means that he knows how to use BRING OUT and talent, name3 three things that make success. moving picture They are, in the order of importance: First, APPEAL, the power to interest the public by force of The vulgar, outworn personality. is not meant. Nor "sex appeal, is mere physirat beauty meant. Second ABILITY, the power to express emotion, to act. to Third APTITUDE, power learn, to adapt innate ability to the work in hand, to cooperate, understand, express. Women, for stage or screen," says Mr. Suntell. are divided in two classes. First the type that men want to own, Garbo, Dietrich. Second the women that men want to protect. Mary Pickford. Janet Gaynor. Between float all sorts, less definite, less successful." JANKERS Mav July UTAH. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1932. K, ... PRESS SHANGHAI, Feb. 8. Hill The Chinese attacking the Japanese In a determined drive, turned their artillery tonight on the international settlement itself, the neutral area occupied by foreigners. The Chinese shelled the Japanese defense area of the settlement where important American property is located. The Chinese notified the United States consular authorities that since the Japanese were using the settlement as a base for military operations, the Chinese could not be responsible for the safety of foreign lives and property. Brigaidier General George Flemming of Great Britain, commanding the defending forces in the international settlement, announced that if Chinese entered the settlement, the foreign defenders would be instructed to shoot them down. FARM AID I. CHAMP SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 8 (I.Ri F. P. Chump, president of the Cache Valley Banking company and past president of the Utah WASHINGTON, Feb. 8. (IMi has association, The Japanese plan for neutraliza- State Bankers tion of Chinese forces will be re- been appointed a member of the district board for the advisory jected by the United States if council finof the reconstruction placed formally before this govern- ance corporation - in connection ment of the The United States finds it diffi- with the appropriations in the Salt Lake discult to believe that reports of the corporation trict, according to advices re-1J project can be authentic. ceived here from Washington, It appears to officials here as C more for scheme a than nothing the partition of China which was blocked by Secretary of State USE DYNAMITE John Hays open door policy. Further, the American government finds it difficult to credit ROADS TO reports of the scheme because of the aJpanese of November 9 asserting it sided with the oilier SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 8. U l'i powers of the world against the Arterial highways throughout of China. partition the intermountain section were giadualty being opened today as highway department crews lrom different states kept up their work. YOUNG GANGSTER In many instances, dynamite was used to blast out the snow. Huge drifts, which piled up durLEADER ON ing high winds last week, were packed down solid by the weekthaws und snowplows were NEW YORK, Fell. 8 .IT". - Vin- end unable to move them until loosencent Cull, baby faced ed by dynamite. gang leader, reported to have a Ttiis method was used in clearfliO.ixK) price on his bead, was stint Salt and killed today, apparently "put ing of the road between und Provo at the point Lake on the spot by bis own body of theCity mountain, as well as in guard. NeThe killer trapped Call In a several section! of northern been vada where roads have telephone booth. He raised a sub- closed fur several days. machine gun and fired. All traffic through .northern Bullets ripped through I he thin was into Idaho Utah being routed wood and glass partition of the booth. Call slumped to the floor by way of Malud und Logan as the new road through Snowville dead. and Strevell to Twin Falls from Brigham City continued to be blocked by snow. There is little IN TWO prospect of getting this road open lor several days. Transcontinental routes to the STALLED AUTO east through Wyoming are also being cleared out through the use of dynamite. Drifts in this section are reported to be the worst RAWLINS, Wyo., Feb. 8. U.li A car stalled on a snowbound in history. highway near here meant death to two Japanese Saturday. The story of a struggle with the snow was told by the four suro viving members of the party which became stalled early Saturday in men were pledged to Twelve huge drifts which almost covered Greek letter organizations at a their car. recent bid day at the Utah State The dead were Uheiga Namba Agricultural college. 31, and his uncle, Usaburg Namba, The men and the organizations 53. both of Cherokee. Only the whieh they joined are as follows: presence of mind of Uheigas wife Pi Kappa Alpha. Jerry Whitaker; two children alive Phi Kappa Iota. Ieo Hammond; kept herself and through the night. She forced the Delta Nu, Carl Lambert, Dick children to run throughout the Powell; Alpha Delta Epsilon, Eunight with only short rest periods. gene Tuttle, Allen Alvord, Delbert Another member of the party, Fuhriman; Beta Kappa, Leon Ernest Diagle, lost his way while Stucki, Bryce W. Anderson, Ray seeking aid and was found Sun- E. Hepworth, John Franklin and Francis Johnston. day suffering from exposure. OPEN SPOT FREEZE Fraternities Fledge To cooperate as far as possible with the Cache county board of Cache the education to keep county schools in operation at least for the eight months period already contracted for in the year 1931-3- 2 Cache the aim of the County School Teachers association. Decision to aid the school board in every way was made Saturday at a meeting of the afternoon House of Delegates of the teachers organization at the courthouse. The assembly included 25 teacher delegates, and four visitL. Hall C ors, with President member of the South Cache high school faculty, presiding. President Hall, with Leland Q. Pulsipher, principal of the River Heights school, and vice president of the association, will go before afterthe school next Thursday noon to present in detail the deand their cision of the teachers proposed plan of cooperation. During the assembly, Supt. J. VV. of the Kirkbride county schools laid before the teuchers. school of the pressing problem fiances now confronting the board The condition needs some sort of adjustment if the full eight mouths plan is to be carried out this year, he said. Vance Walker of Mendon disTeachers cussed the proposed which Credit Union by plan teachers would make monthly payments in return for which credit certificates would be issued enteacher to borrow titling the money. Several other Utah school . Feb. 8 if Pi quor Traffic in Africa. $r,5. Trans- , Weber county key Ranker, and A. L. Christensen, Weber count v agricultural agent. Director D. H. Ottis of the agricultural commission of the American Bankers association will he the speakers at the gathering. Recording the Indian sign language, $4,000, toward the exContributing Sopenses of the International ciety for Exploring the Artie Regions by Air, $30i. Contributing toward the Convention of the Li $1,800. FUN M ENT The complexity of the government is hard to realize. There is hardly any field in whieh it is not active and in each of these fields there is much more to be Uoue than nine out of ten lay it 68 9 Close .7 57 8 581-- 583-- 8 MR. MILLS E of New Secreof tary Treasury A Blii-tcl- WASHINGTON, Feb. 8 (U.Pi broad inquiry into the silver problem was voted today by th house. It passed a resolution authorizthe into ing an investigation cause and effect of the depressed price of silver and methods of stabilizing its value. The inquiry also would cover the monetary policy of the United States and foreign countries and their relation to the value ol silver and also the efficacy of an international stabilization conference. A TWO CRITICALLY QUEEN Girl D Ruler ;it Brigham City Winter Carnival have already put this plan fctu effect. R. F. Shumway presented findcommitings of u special teachers tee of which he is chairman, have aiude through an investigation of classes of taxable property in Cajhe county and the relationproperty to the ship 4f that schooIF A detailed report of this will M made public, it was decidin ed.. Mr. Shumway resides TrenUfi. 'The! Shumway report shows, according to Mr. Shumway, that if a lq er cent cut were effected in. teachers salaries it would mean a reduction of only 71 cents on every $1U00 of assessed valuation of the within property county: school district on less than one thousandth. Wit S. A. Dunn, Hyrum, as chairMan, and R. Homer Hyde, HydeTlark; and E. B. Oleson North' Cache high school, as other members, a committee was appointed by the organization to go into the matter of teacher salary contracts for next year. This committee will work with the school board and report on salary contracts to the teachers before the time arrives next spring for contract renewals. Neither the school board nor the teachers group has outlined any program whereby teachers' salaries will be involved. Neither the hoard nor the teachers association anticipates that reduc- Miss Opal Iaarsetu 17, is shown tion will be made in salaries wearing the trowu :.htj this' year. when she ruled as queen ol Box Rider countys Snow (ami val, held in Brigham Oily Many (I o v erinm n t Men In Attendance At (.'on fab SALT LARK CITY. Feb. 8 (UP; Hope of western irrigation farm- ers fur federal relief has been anby considerably dampened nounced policies of economy at to the delegates Washington, American Farm Bureau Federation's third annual Waterusers conference were told at the opening session today. were urged to The delegates work for passage of the Glenn Smith bill, which provides a revolving fund of $100,000,000 to aid drainage und private irrigation districts. The members of the conference' are deeply concerned about the recovery of the farming conditions and have promised to do everything within their power to hasten any program which may be of benefit to the farmers. Among those attending the conference are Ir. Eiwood Mead, federal reclamation commissioner; M. S. Winder, executive secretary of the American Farm Bureau Federation and formerly secretary of the Utah State Farm Bureau; and I. K. Freudeuihal Las Cruces, N. M., president of the New Mexico Slate Farm Bureau , Sylvester Shandrew, 79, Saturday ; evening local hospital brief illness from pneumonia. services will be held 1 p. m. in the Avon Tuesday ward chapel. Burial will be in Hie Avon cemetery. Mr. Shandrew had been a resident of Avon since 1919. He was born December 6. 883 Westport, N. Y. While residing iri the east he joined the L. D. church in 184. He married Anne Jensen. Mrs. Shamlrew died two years ago. While an Avon resident, Shandrew has served as counselor In the ward Sunday school super-intendency, and as an aide in the genealogical society. He is suvived by one son, Hen-- i rv Shandrew, Avon two daughters, Calif., rj' Mrs. Cary. Woodland. t, and Mary J. Yeates, 30 Utah, grandchildren and 37 great grandchildren, amh three half sisters who reside in West port, N. Y. Henry Avon-die- d CEDAR CITY. Feb. 8 (UP -- Two persons were critically injured and six others suffered less serious hurts today when a Los Angeles-Sal- t Lake City bus plunged off the highway near here and overturned. Mrs. John Owens, Malad, Idaho, and I. W. Paine, Fillmore, Utah, were taken to a hospital immediately. The Idaho womans lungs were punctured by three broken ribs. Paine suffered internal injuries. Others injured Included Mrs J Evans, of Malad. (By United Press) NEW YORK Weakness in commodity prices was an outstanding factor in bringing pressure on individual issues on the stock exchange today, unsettling the market. Leading industrials, notably U. S. Steel, recovered from their lows made in the afternoon and were holding around the previous close in dull turnover. PRESTON The local With many friends and relatives of Commerce held their annual assembled about his bier to do election Thursday night. Five new honor to his memory, and to laud members of the board of governor elected. The new board njem-- j his business, civic, church and were hers are: K C. Gadd, Theo private fellowship with them, fit-T. K. Bowden, Smith Ai-l- e ting funeral rites fur John Quayle,. and Rnluh Miller. bauk-SCache dairyman, prominent The members consists er and churchman, were held at of K retiring A. Leland Hau-- j noon Sunday in the Third ward sen, HaroldCrockett, Swift, Knnl Peter-oorBishop William Evans, chapel. and A. C. Hull. Dr S. P. conducted the services. Pucker, J Homer Johnson, L. W. Tlle Yeagers told of the many Smith, and Ralph Evans are the associated with r ,ilpy liaj members of the board year3 Mr yuftyie, ulld spoke of his President E A Crockett pretegrity, high regard and devotion sented a sum.nam.ed report of for 1S family, his sounuuess ol the dubs activities for the past in year. the purpose and endeavor The first meeting of the )Usjncss and other relation- - complete board will be held Monzeul of his unfaltering ships, and day at the Chamber of Commerce club rooms At this meeting a in spiritual and temporal activities. They were John T. Caine, Sr., president of the coming ycai v ill auditor of the Utah State Agricul- he chosen. tural college; A. E. Craiiney, Cache Alma stake high councilman; Sonne, cashier and vice president FIRMAGE BACK of of the First National bank, whieh Mr. Quayle at the time of his death, was a director; Dr. H CONFAB K. Merrill of the Cache Valiev General hospital of which Mr. Quayle was president; President Joseph E. Cardon of Cache stake A A. Firmagc, manager of th' and Bishop Evans. numbers local J, C. Penney company store,r musical Appropriate has returned to Logan from comprised opening and closing sewhere he utteuded the seclections by the ward choir, a song convention of his organizational Relief ward the chorus, Society by a vocal solo, by Frank Baugh, tion Due to the strenuous vu k of tlu and a duet by Mr. Baugh and Jr, Mr uif his sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Thorpe convention,iU und Firnuge in now conltiic! seriously and fragrant to Many beautiful his home lit is gradually iu flowers covered the casket und and will be able to I" lined the chupel rostrum, marking proving around again m a few d.y. esteem to the added tribute high to rt ports from tin hm-iheld by many for (lie Quayle 'cording family. Ml lKilnl Prayers were offered by II D Blanchard and Christian II JacobTile Feb s d PHOENIX. Orson state proved tli.it Uinnie Kuth sen. Pallbearers were Smith, Job Rowland. C hristian 'Judd was an qccs.sory utter tm murder of her two girl friends, Jacobsen, Thomas H. Ket-eami Huber as Blanchard but it failed completely to show bet. that she killed them, defense atBurial was in the city cemetery torneys told the jun today in final where the grave was dedicated by arguments at her trial on the George V. Lindquist of the (ache h rife he murdered Agnus Ann LcKui. stake presidency. j Mr,. 1 Lake-poin- INJURED IN BUS WOMAN CALLED IN MILLVILLE MILLVILLE Mrs. Nancy Elizabeth Dail Olson, 57, wife of Neils P. Olson, died at the family home here Saturday night after a prolonged illness. Funeral services will be held in the Millville ward chapel Tuesday at 1 p. m. Burial will be in the Millville cemetery. Mrs. Olson had been a resident of Millville 30 years. She was born in Chateau county, Alabama, December 11, 1874, a daughter of James and Dinesia Mazinga Dail Besides her husband she is survived by several other immediate relatives. NO WHEAT WASHINGTON. Feb. 8 (ID1 The to Federal distribute proposal Board wheat to feed the was killed today when the house agricultural committee bill rejected a passed by the sen- ate authorizing the distribution of 40,000,000 bushels. OF THE MONGOOSE There are around Washington hundred of government workers, who each morning slip into un alpaca coat and bury themselves in some work of which the public never heurd. The chances are. however, that each week these men save the government more than the total of their years' sul-- I As an example, take the ary. case of the mongoose. If your knowledge of the mongoose Is based on Kipling, or the moving picture of the mongoose battling a cobra, you probably have a high opinion of the valiant little beast. Not so with the Biological Survey. , It would much prefer you bring 10 cobras into the country than one mongoose. Each year no few of the tax dol ( ASK lie went to Harvard. He was Hoover's choice In 1928 for secretary of the treasury, but there was a slip up. A1 Smith gave him a terrific lacing in a governorship battle In New York in 1926. Before that, he was a member of congress. He talks with a loud, booming voice; he has a gift for sarcasm. He is nil aristocrat, fabulously rich. He looks upon the common herd with disdain. Now, Hoover has chosen him to step into Andrew VV. Mellon'S shoe 3. Ogden Livingston Mills. He's 47. He is credited with Indebt moraventing the torium put over last summer. to get thn Now hes trying Hoover-Mellotax program thru congress. Success: N. S. G. He favors a sales lax. Mills graduated from FTorans J at 19, studied law, took up praction. Family was wealthy; a power In society. He ran for congress' In 1912; beaten. Got into the N. Y. state senate two years later. Served aa a staff officer with the A. E. F. He got into congress in 1920, stayed there until he decided to contest with A1 in 26. Hes married. His wife is the' former Dorothy Randolph Fell, who divorced John R. Fell in 23. His first wile wa3 Margaret Rutherford. She has been married twice since, ome to a baronet, once to a prince. Milb smokes cigars, eats heavily, exercises mornings golfs after- one-ye- n hold-ove- AFTER Den-jve- br : WILBUR HINDERS CACHE ADDITION WASHINGTON. Feb 8 (U.PI luvrstig itiim was underway here today investigating reports that nlnujA between different govern-- 1 was holding 1, icnl departments 'back the addition of 19,000 acre of land In the Cache National l fores! The land lies lad ween Downey on the west side state highway. It Is prosperous irrigated has been used by for grazing purposes. Crnneil. loosened by the sheep, his w idled down into irrigation .all lies and it was to regulate the ana that its addition to ,'iu:i? lie facin' forest was planned. ;V uvt.iry of ttic Interior Wilbur u ieoti'd an adverse opinion cn Oil the grounds ucqtiiMliiin land. forest but n war not diould the facts, as stated, prove ha3 Wilbur irreet. Secretary .i'i. e.e. .si to withdraw his objec-- i tn. ns. t h .1.1 paving the way for i,nl p.iejiu-llnf the I, Juini iu t above a V. et ion a: id noni.nl b ids l a- i . tic .tilth! ion hoin-Far- COURT UPHOLDS LIFE SENTENCE i S. For Unheard Of National Aclivities men know. Take the matter of money it.self. Recoining old silver coins nlone cost $646,748 Iasi year. The paper for the government's bonds cost $845,000. Perhaps the industrial worker may not see the importance of the government's annual expenditure of millions of dollars in combating various agricultural pests, such as the cattle tick and the boll weevil, but on the other hand it is likely that the farmer will consider wasted the $1,923,485 speut in developing trade in foreign countries. The dentist, perhaps, would have little interest in either, but he is a hearty supporter of the work of the Bureau of Standards is doing in improving the standards of the material used in false teeth and other dental supplies. i dlstrljs of Taxpayers Dollar Used By U. WASHINGTON. s Price 5c House Asks AWN RESIDENT Tributes Are, DIES IN LOGAN In PRESTON CHAMBER Inquiry Paid During NAMES GOVERNORS Drop at a after a -- Funeral Quayle Rites Chamber at Students at College Farmer and banker represen- The taxpayer's dollar, once it gets porting high explosives to the nafrom neighboring Utah into the United States treasury, val ammunition deport, at Hawtatives counties have been invited to par- is liable to be used in some gov- thorne, Nev rather than on an Maintaining prisons ticipate in a gathering of the ernmental activity of which the ocean, $6,401. agricultural committee of the Utah taxpayer never heurd. An hour or in the Ottoman empire, Egypt, Bankers association at the Hotel two spent turning the pages of Ethiopia, China and Persia, $9,600. Bigelow in Ogden at 7:30 p. m. the Federal budget will show that Caring for the le'rs in Guam, Uncle Sam has more uses for the $33,61)7. and for Alaska insane, Wednesday. N. D. Salisbury, cashier of the dollar than even the taxpayer $156, IKK). Honoring some memory by erection of monuments. Celebration Trust and Thatcher Bank company himself. of birthdays, or the purchase of For instance: of Logan, and chairman of the of the Teaching Alaskans how to raise birth sites, $2,421,007 - including agricultural committee slate association, made this an- reindeers, J34.3UO. Suppressing Alas $2,500 spent for portrait of late nouncement Monday morning on kan liquor traffic, 11,344. Employ- President Harding. receipt of the information from O. ing a valet for President Hoover, COMPLEXITY OF C. Hammond, Teachers tL Aid In Cache Schools , F. High cI.ow kg 5a FIVE O'CLOCK KD1TION FARM GROUP TO MEET Q A N, nn c Chinas Sad New Year. aftbr Oi't-. . . Arthur Brisbane (Copyright, INIIEi) lRES3 BY With whieh are combined the Cache Valley Daily Herald, the Daily Herald and The Journal Today By Grain Range lars are in spent prolcetiie; The America from Ins ravages (trouble with ttic mongoose is that 'he doesn't stop with killing snakes Tie kills everything he can gt hold of. chickens, turds ami ait In places wlute "ground life" years ago he was imported to handle the snake sit ual loo. be now costs millions of dollais a year in an indirect damage to crops ordinarily protected by tile birds and animats the inoic'.oesr kills, INDIANS tOSTLY Indians cost Hie the Libi ary of Iongress tlic Smithsonian Institute Shut your eyes and $1.208 711 Honk of something Whatever it is, the chances are that the government did something about it last year and spent some of umr money doing it. llut don't be too sure that the government was extravagant in all its ex- penditures. Return for a moment to the White House und look id its payroll. There you will find that the I louver's private plumber was hired for $1,680. Imagine being uble to get a plumber's full .time for less than you pay tbe cook! Thai s what the White House ilid for tbe chief Cook gets $1,920 while the lesser kitchen lights were lured tor $1,326 V.'ls, government $6,821,190 in 1931, including an appropriation ol $7,162 especial used in combating the liquor traffic. National larks cost $9 the Botanical Gardcu $2ol,- - Ul,2U0 and 15S,-35- $1,1)80. Mrs. DENVER, Keb. 8 d'Ki t O'Laughlin, was doomed to ranks of the living dead when the Uolorado Supreme court upheld her murder conviction and ordered her transferred from the I ener county jail to the state penitentiary to serve a life sentence. The court ruled the red haired "flipper wife" must atone with . hie of hud labor at Canon city for slaying tier stepdaughter, Leona t) i.uughlin, m, by feeding her Deal Uiie to-jd- glass. UTAH: Unsettled tonight and Tuesday, probably rain or snow ; little change in temperature. Maximum temperature Sunday, (4; one year ago, 51. Minimum temperature last night, 75; one years ago, 25. |