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Show v n S The Todays News What Lincoln said nearly 100 years ago, applies just as muon today. Page one, column six. Arthur Brisbane OPENS (Copyright, 1932) The high mountains on the west are covered with snow more than twenty feet deep, and the wind the sweeping over them from ocean is full of oxygen, and life. This is a good place to stop, on your way to the coast. Barstow or Victorville will provide accomodations. But do not come to stay unless you have money to leave with, when you go, arid maintain you, while here. It is a place to live, not to earn, or make profits. This is mentioned, again, because chambers of commerce north, west and southwest fear that traffic and money may be divided here from more promising sections of the coast. . Ecuador abandons - the gold basis, with a good excuse; it has no gold. The International bank, established by the League of Na tions, will help weak nations to maintain the gold standard, so it More interesting to us says. are the shipments of small strongly built barrels, filled with United States gold coins, pouring steadily into the bank of France vaults. Economic Leaders Of West Gather For Conference DENVER, Colo., Feb. 12 on economics, .leaders in the silver mining industry and authorities on will meet here next Monday for the Western States Silver conference. The conference was called by William Jennings Bryan, Jr., a Hollywood lawyer and son of the who first ad"Great Commoner vocated the 16-ratio for silver. Delegates from all the western states will be present at the conference, which will be held in the house chamber of the slate eapi-to!.l!i-Ex- perts 1 l. IS ORGANIZATION Bryan has insisted that the organization be and nonpartisan. "Education and the creation of an enlightened public opinion should be the only aim of the Western States Silver conference, Bryan told the goveruors of the western states when he made his call for the meeting. "The end must be obtained by governmental action and the means to that end must be determined by governmental authority," Ryan said. There is no desire to revive the old political issue of bimetallism, but we wish to bring about an exchange of ideas on the subject which may result in a definite program for the solution of the problem." BRYAN OUTLINES PROGRAM Bryan has outlined the following program for the conference: form 'should the organization take? Should it be inor unincorporated ? corporated 2 Drafting of a charter and declaration of principles. 3 Whether the assembly should go oh record as recommending Shy given bimetallic ratio, or should it recognize the fact that this matter is a detail which should be determined by authorities. 4 How and in what manner orthe ganization work throughout country should be conducted to obtain the best results. 5 How and to what extent the work should be financed. 6 Should a petition to congress be circulated ? Utah, Wyoming, Arizona, Nevada, Montana, California, and Colorado have appointed delegates to the conference. Governor William H. Adams has invited over 125 Colorado business men, bimetallism advocates and mining experts to take part in the conference. Other western states have appointed delegates to be present at the meeting, which will probably continue for several days. The Denver Junior Chamber of Commerce is taking an active interest in the meeting, and will provide the entertainment and other features of amusement for the visiting delegates. The way to keep your gold standard is to keep your gold. This country should realize that, in time, and forbid gold exportation, on any pretext. If our supplies of quinine, or digitalis, were threatened we should forbid their exportation. High finance tells you that gold is as important for prosperity as quinine for malaria, or digitalis for weak hearts. You may ask why, with the worlds greatest gold supply, something seems to have gone wrong with our prosperity. High finance says the question is not pertinent. The price of raw sugar Tuesday dropped below three cents a pound, lowest prices in history were reTO corded. There is opportunity to use profitably the great crops of fruit that this rainy season makes THEMSELVES The farmer also is incertain. terested, for his family and his stock. Mr. Babst, head of the big sugar company, should advertise GRAND JUNCTION, Colo., Feb. special low prices for molasses 12. A campaign for the utili by the barrel. Mixed with chop- zation of home and natped or shredded cornstalks, mo- ural resources, inproducts an effort to relasses is a food of greatest value turn the district to natural prosfor horses and cattle. perity, waa under way today in cities of western Colorado and eastern Utah. FOUR NAMED IN Pledges of cooperation in the great drive have been signed by thousands of residents in the disFINALS trict. Money will be kept at home, and hoarding discouraged will be put to work Four boys of the Utah State Ag- Unemployed the hundreds of business men ricultural collpge were successful by who have pledged support to the s in the of the S. A. It. Oratorical contest which was drive. The unemployed will be sent held at the college Thursday afamong the housewives, seeking ternoon. for pledges to aid in the They are: Grant Redford, of Lo- signers communal effort to lift this secPatrio- tion gan, his subject being of the west by its own boottism and Internationalism;" Lloyd Harris of Tremonton, who talked straps. on "Washington;" D. C. Winget, of Monroe, the "Washington Putriot" and Rex Lowe of RichPLAN field, "Washington and His Contribution to Humanity." Wllford D. Porter, Professor C. J. Myers, DINNER IN HYRUM and Professor Wallace Goates were the judges. The finals of the contest will be held February 24 In the U. Members of the Hyrum Fish and S. A. C. auditorium. A beautiful Game Protective association have medal will be presented to the a banquet to be held towinner by the State chapter of plannedat 7:30 oclock at the South night Sons of American the Revolu Cache the high school at Hyrum. tion. Supervisor Carl B. Arentsen and other staff members of the local office of the Cache National forest have accepted invitations to attend the gathering. O. H. Birch is president of the UTAH Fair tonight and Satur- Hyrum Fish and Game organizaday; little change in temperature. tion with H. R. Adams, principal Maximum temperature Thurs- of the South Cache high school, day 35; one year ago, 38. secretary. No announcement Minimum temperature last night, of the pro27. one 18; gram numbers has been made. year ago, PEOPLE JOIN HEP ORATORY semi-final- i 3 Milestone h Enjoyed Interesting Musical Career On WILBUR Staff Writer eventful years In a Seventy-sisweet music culminate world of d and today when -faced Wilhelm Fogelberg, master of music, celebrates his 76th birthday at his home, 458 North Main street. There he lives alone no, not and alone his viq,'fn, piano memories abide there also. Memories of a beloved departed mate children now and of adored achieving success in various parts Memories of byof the globe. gone days when enraptured audiences sat breathless under the spell of his rare interpretations of the old music masters. The violin is my partner. I live with it, Professor Fogelberg as affectionately said smilingly he lifted the instrument from its case. The humble studio seemed to widen Into an attractive music hall as the aged musician produced tender strains on his cherished companion. PLACES VIOLIN FOREMOST Prof. Wilhelm Fogelberg "The violin Is to music what a cornerstone Is to a building, It is said Professor Fogelberg. It E. B. BROSSARD Ihe foundation instrument. gives a tone no other instrument can give. The violin cultivates, the ear. It assures harmony. Regard ENDS AS less o fwhat instrument a person desires to play in a band or an he should become GROUP LEADER orchestra, firstwith violin. the acquainted Through such study he develops ear for music to be attained Dr. Edgar B. Brossard, formerly an no other way. Later if '.ayint of Logan, was succeeded as presi- in a trombone or oboe in dent of the Washington alumni a cornet, he can tell whether or a chapter of the Alpha Zeta Frater- notgroup, he is in tune with the other nity by Dr. A. G. McCall, bureau instruments. A stone-dea- f person of chemistry and soils, U. S. Decan learn to play the piano and partment of Agriculture, at a rewill he but it well, fairly cent election of officers, accord- play never be a violinist. ing to word received here by that Professor Fogelberg is organization. C. G. Woodbury of a Although teacher of voice and piano as the National Canners association well as violin, the latter is his was elected vice president. favorite musical instrument The Alpha Zeta is a national out and happiness would it nil joyWhen fraternity whose chief purpose it be missing. clouds of gloom is to encourage activity and pro- cross the the violin pathway, gress in the field of agriculture. On Located in the shadows of the brings ofback the sunshine. him central offices of the U. S. De- wings an tenderness it carries more invisible world, partment of Agriculture, the Wash- into beautiful by far than his mundane ington Alumni chapter includes surroundings. in its membership a great many of the nations leading authorities STUDIED MUSIC and experts. Under the direction AS A CHILD 'I have always loved music, of Dr. Brossard, the organization Even as a has just completed a very suc- says Mr. Fogelberg. cessful year. Among other things child I was moved fay Its power. he has been instrumental in the It would ring in my ears and fill, whole being. It would give me launching of two important pro- my exjects to further the purposes of no rest until I had given it Many times after I pression. the fraternity. A national achievement award, and the sponsoring began playing the violin when of a national or international pub- nine years of age, I had to arise from my bed at night to interpret lic meeting. was graduated on the violin the music that Dr. Brossard from the Utah Agricultural college swelled within me. Then mother in 1911, and after obtaining his would scold and threaten to whip doctors degree at the University me if I did not remain in bed. Lund, the university city of of Minnesota in 1920, he returned its reto the local college as head of the southern Sweden with was cathedral, department of agricultural econ- nowned ancient omics and farm management. In the birthplace of Professor Fogelhe was appointed to the berg. To the home of Nils and 1925, United States Tariff commission Maria GrSnvall Fogelberg he arby President Calvin Coolidge in rived February 12, 1856. were "Me and Abe Lincoln which capacity he is still serving. In January, 1930, President Her- twins, jokes Mr. Fogelberg. Many of bis near relatives were bert Hoover appointed Dr. Brosmusicians, although neither his sard as chairman of the commission,, which position he held until father nor mother were musically the tariff commission was re- inclined. Nevertheless, they recognized their Bons talents and early organized in September, 1930. While Dr. Brossard has been provided him with good teachers. studied under leading musiHe absent from Logan for nine years now, he still maintains his legal cians in Lund and nearby Mai mo, the third largest city in Sweden. residence here. DIRECTED GLEE CLUBS It was in Malmo he became a DERN BOOM WINS music teacher when only 16 years of age. Besides teaching many students, be also directed ADDED IMPETUS private eight different choirs and glee clubs at one time. The Swedes, like the Germans, are great music lovers. Male glee clubs among WASHINGTON, Feb. 12 UP) Added was given the university students and union laimpetus H. Dern borers of various drive of Governor George occupations for the vice presidential nominee were especially fostered there in in the of the Democratic such Seven those par.y days. glee clubs coming campaign when Senator were directed by young Fogelberg William H. King introduced him while still In his teens. There to the senate here Thursday as were the glees of the clgarmakers, its next presiding officers." the mechanics, the railroaders, the Dern, who is in Washington to carpenters, the masons, and varihouse confer with the public ous other trades. lands committee on the bill to give The outstanding musical organiunreserved public domain to the zation under his direction and the states, lunched with Senator King, one closest his heart was the Senator Key Pittman of Nevada "Mormon" choir in MalmS. Severand Will Rogers. al years before he was born, his In his introduction of the Utah parents had become converts to added that Senator governor, King "Mormonism the first message of lie was going to place Derns which had then recently been name in nomination for vice presito southern Sweden. dent nominee at the Democratic brought Through returning "Mormon convention in Chicago next June. missionaries and emigrants, the fame of the young Swedish musician spread to Utah. Church auHYRUM SCOUTERS thorities made it possible for him to come to Utah when he was 26 of age to provide musical SUNDAY years TO education for the rapidly growing population. HAS LIVED President E. A. Jacobsen and LONG IN LOGAN Executive Preston W. Pond of While Dr. Karl G. Maeser in his the Cache Valley Boy Scout coun- German dialect laid a bulwark cil have been requested to meet foundation for the large church bishops and Scout officials of the school at Provo, Wilhelm FogelHyrum district Sunday afternoon berg in his Swedish dialect laid at the South Cache high school the foundation for the present in Hyrum. splendid music department of that A district committee session and school. He conducted classes in scouters meeting will also be held voice, organ, piano and violin. He during the afternoon. Executive Pond announced Friday. (Continued on page six) SPORTSMEN x white-haire- TERM MEET Price 5c Will it require another civil war, not between north anil south, but beta pen the robots of capitalism and the forces of the comon people, to bring ubnut an equalization? IGtid what Lincoln said. You will find it us true today as it ever was in those black days of our early history. This statement on the Ntatus of capital and labor waa written by Abraham uiiiom in the days when slavery was the JAP ATTACK DALE BY l . Seventy-Sixt- SOON FIVE O'CLOCK EDITION Capitol And Labor Logan Musician, Passes Herald-Journ- This, as the date line tells you, is written on the Mohave desert, sixty miles east of the Pacific feet ocean, and two thousand above that wide surface. It does desert seem like a not now, in this winter of strange, weather. The Mohave river, which flows ordinarily out of sight below the desert floor, supplying ranch wel With water, a long row of Cottonwood trees marking its coursS, is now a wide torrent, undermining bridges, washing away big trees that it has nourished. 1932. 2, What Abraham Lincoln Said About Two Continents HODCE, Calif. France declined to pay what she owed this country and Andrew Jackson said a debtor, refusing to payv should have his property seized. France ultimately paid. We cannot seize infor debt, ternational properties and Senator Hiram Johnson suggests an excellent substitute. He offers a bill strictly forbidding tiie sale here of any securities by any nation that has defaulted on its obligations to the United States. Foreigners would not like to be cut off from this finane-n- l sugar bowl. Will Rogers, back lrom a tour around the world says, "In Europe, when youre introduced to somebody, they say. glad to meet you, cancel the Hiram Johnsons suggesdebts. tions might cure that. 1 MEET Wilhelm Fogelberg, Noted He's 76 Today Iliram Johnson Suggests. Weather in the Desert. Precious Gold, Keep It. Low Sugar. tfi FEBRUARY LOGAN, UTAH. FRIDAY, Today UR Journal BY UNITED PRESS The Chicago stock exchange and w heat pit were closed Friday which wa h Lincoln's birthday and a legal holiday. With which are combined the Cache Valley J)aily Herald, the Daily Herald and The Journal Number 36. Volume. 23. By Herald- - Grain Range Fight to Standstill In Ruins of Chapei tender- BY UNITED PRESS (Copyright) SHANGHAI, Feb. 13 Chinese and Japanese armies fought again to a standstill in the ruins of Chapel Friday night. A terrific bombardment of heavy artillery and severe rifle and machine gun fighting resulted in algain for neither side. The Chinese, not only holding their own, made a desperate attack but the Japanese held their ground. At 1 a. m. Saturday, the bombardment subsided and the wearied armies sought a brief rest be fore a renewal of hostilities. Japanese were landing heavy reinforcements, estimated in some quarters at 20,000 troops and were expected as soon as organized, to a final drive to take the Chinese back from the city along 120 mile front, from the mouth of the Whangpoo to the city itself. The bombardment began just outside the international settlement. of hostilities Resumption ironically enough, coincided with arrival of the American, British and French ministers in Shanghai on a new peace mission. Numerous Chinese shells fired at the Japanese between them and the settlement, fell within the Japanese defense area of the settlement. (IM-- The bin chief problem of the United States. Strangely, it fits the situation In the United States at the present time, many, many years after slavery was to have been abolished. CAPITAL AND LABOR By Abraham Lincoln It is assumed that labor is available only in connection with capital ; that nobody labors unless somebody else, owning capital, somehow by the use of it, induces him to labor. This assumed, it is next considered whether it is best that capital shall hire laborers, and thus induce them to work by their own consent, or buy them and drive them to do it without their consent. Having proceeded so far, it is naturally concluded all laborers are either hired laborers or what .... CAR TAGS COVER USED LEAKING ROOFS WS PUEBLO, Colo., Feb. 12. The county clerk had to s to get his cry to the nice, shiny, new 1932 automobile license tags back. It all started when someone discovered automobile licenses made fine "shingles" for covering a roof, or a leak in a roof. The county clerk had a large supply of 1931 license tags which had not been sold. He told a newspaper that anyone who wanted the tags for roofing could have them. Early the next day he was roofers. besieged by would-b- e (L'.P) roof-top- Theyre By-la- hall Fire Chief C. W. Rapp, president of the organization, was in charge of the session. The constitution preamble provides that the employes bind themselves into an association to advance and safeguard the gov ernmental interests of Logan city in cooperaUon with the city It further provides that the association shall have bearing on the social welfare of city workers. George Mickelsen, newly appointed city water department suwas a memnamed perintendent, ber of the executive committee, and Police Sergeant James Smith was selected as sergeant at arms of the association. Other officers of the organization were named last November The and constitution were drawn up by City Judge Jesse P. Rich and City Attorney Leon Fonnesbeck. Dubs of members of the organization are to be 25 cents a month. by-la- BENSON HONOR BUREAU SELECTS In route. TAX COMMITTEE A special tax committee down was The loss The newspaper later. base-me- n discovered was called again, and after an impassioned appeal, by press and clerk, the tags were returned, safe and sound. of the Cache County Farm bureau was named Thursday at a meeting of the executive committee of the organization at the courthouse. Members of the committee, according to Agricultural Agent R L. Wrigley, are John A. Leish Frank Wood man, chairmen; Amalga; Alfred Chambers, Smith field; A. H. Buttars, Cornish; and George S. Daines, Smithfield. President E. E. Hendricks of Lewiston, president of the county farm bureau, and Agent Wrigley, will contact each local president in the county to discuss work to be undertaken in a membership drive, and consider the farm bureau program recently adopted for the in cases, go get em, he told the applicants. The anpijej gpt the 1931 rags, but they soon ran'but, and case after case of nice new 1932 tags went the same DRUNKEN ARRESTS ARE STILL HEAVY WASHINGTON, Feb. 12 Dry America far outstripped wet for Great Britain in arrests drunkeness in proportion to population, Research Director Stanof the Moderation ley Shirk League, New York, told a senate 1932. today. In reply to a statement by chairman Metcalf that England and Wales with 40,000,000 people had 50,000 arrests in 1928, Shirk School submitted figures from police records of American cities. A new club has been organized Philadelphia, he testified, had at the Logan high school for the 51.000 arrests. In 1914, and over in purpose of stimulating interest 20.000 in 1921, the first year afaDd to contribute picphotography ter prohibition, and over 60,000 in tures to the annual year book. 1928. held first the meeting, During last Monday, the following officers were elected: Douglas Borlase, president; Ellouise Torgensen, vice WORLD BOYCOTT Francis Fonnesbeck, president; secretary; Dean Smith and Phillip comof executive members (IN IAFAN Bullen, mittee. Charter members include Leora The Fully, Wilford Degn, Dean Smith, GENEVA, Feb. 12 (V.P) council of twelve of the League Phillip Bullen, Douglas Borlase, Dor-saFred Rex, Ellouise Torgenson, of Nations with delegates from Mathews and Thaine Car- China and Japan absent convened lisle. Club advisors are P. A. C. today to discuss China's demand Tedersen, Oretta Hall and Pearl that the council summon a general Spencer. meeting of the council. The Chinese request is possibly a move preliminary to a request for a world economic boycott on Japan. Dr? Hu?membe7Jorth?chines'e delegation, told the United T Tfthe unc dilTnot- Vad extraordinary assembly, China will make a direct formal request for convocation. Picture Club At Logan High COURT HELD Boy Scout Honor Court proceedings will be held for the Benson district of the Cache valley council at Newton in connection with the regular sacrament service in the ward chapel Sunday evening. The court is under the auspices of the Scout Troop 64, Newton. Homer Daines, court of honor chairman for the Benson disAmos trict, and Commissioner Bair will direct the affair. A11 awards in be will Scouting given, and all troops in the Benson stake are invited to participate. By Group Through a newly created Bankers Loan company Livestock which was formed in Salt Lake City Thursday, livestock men of Cache valley and other parts of the intermountam area will b able to make loans, large or small, on livestock from funds supplied by the new federation Reconstruction Finance corpora' tion. we call slaves. Now, there is no such relation between capital and labor Only through this company will livestock men he able to negotiate as here assumed loans from the Reconstruction Labor is prior to and independent of capital. Capital is Finance corporation. Other monies which had the finance corporation only the fruit of labor, could never have existed if labor handies under the recently ennot first existed. Labor is the superior of capital, and de- acted federal measure will go to serves much the higher consideration. railroads, big commercial concerns and other large enterprises. MEETING HELD IN SALT LAKE 1932 NORTHERN ROADS So declared Frederick P. Champ, president of the Cache Valley TO bank of Logan, who is a member of the advisory board of the new STILL BLOCKED loan organization, Friday morn- Arterial highways to Pocatello from Preston were still ooseu Friday, reports Indicated. No traffic from north of Preston was reported in Logan while Union Pacific busses were traveling north then turning only to Preston, around and returning. A blizzard which swept over Cache valley Thursday afternoon and early evening, filled in numerous outlying roads, for a time CITY EMPLOYES threatened to close the Sardine route and generally disrupted traffic before it subsided. BY-LAADOPT Travelers over the Sardine canyon Thursday afternoon reported one of the worst blizzards in hisand a constitution for tory, cars barely able to creep ths Logan City Employes associa- along over the deep, snow ooverea tion were adopted at a meeting ruts. ol xity worker Thursday night at tbs fire Reconstruction Funds Made Available nnni SrhN ing. Captaiization of the loan company at $l,0u0,000 was effected at the Salt Lake meeting Thursday at which E. O. Howard, Walker Bank and Trust company preel-den- t, was named president, with O. W. Adams and M. S. Eccles, former Logan bankers now of Salt Lake and Ogden, as vice president and treasurer respectivel- y. Mr. Champ was expecting a call Friday to go to Sait Lake to attend another meeting of the new loan company which has been incorporated under the laws of Nevada. Besides the advisory committee which comprises banks of Utah and Idaho, there is a subcommittee. MUST SUBSCRIBE TO MTOCK RELIEF MEASURE Washington the LoCom- munity Welfare committee of the Logan Chamber of Commerce cooperating have arranged a special program to be given in the Logan tabernacle Monday, February 22, Washingtons birthday, at 7:30 p. m. Program arrangements are in charge of F. H. Baugh Jr., director of vocal music in the city schools. One of the features of the program will be a special cantata, George Washington, the Father of Our Country, which pupils of the city schools will sing, according to an announcement made Friday morning by Supt. Louis A. Petersen of the city schools who conferred with M. R. Hovey, secretary of the Chamber of Com. merce. The complete program follows: school Selection, Senior high ors, under auspices of the American Legion Post No. 7 of Logan; tableaus, (scenes of Colonial life of Washingtons time) by Senior and Junior high school students; "George Washington" oration, Morris Wright, student of the Utah State Agricultural college. Five hundred school children from the fifth and sixth grades of the city schools, under direction of Miss Ethel Lund, will present the cantata. of H. C. Under supervision of the Maughan, superintendent city light plant, city workmen will decorate the tabernacle in national colors for the occasion. The decorations are to come from the Chamber of Commerce. Boy Scouts of the city will act as ushers and distribute special .programs which have been pre pared. J WASHINGTON, Feb. 12. dE Congress, today, speeded up Presi- new r.elicf ea,sur.e- - ' wl1 both bouss and senate rs to the meM- - i ureforhberahzedfederal reserve f credit that should bring action Y in both branches next week. The senate banking and curren- -. cy committee quickly reported the Glass bill after a brief session. Meanwhile President Charles G. Dawes of the Reconstruction Fi- nance corporation, urged prompt I action by the house committee in ' his own "hell and Maria style, . pounding on the table and ng to frequent profanity. d1 Pu" To join with other groups in band, directed by Irof. A. T the nation in honoring the George Henson; entrance of national colgan city schools with the .4 4 CONGRESS SPEEDS y Washington Bi - centennial n r rp J 1 n nP I liven llereian Progi I g In negotiating loans, livestock men will be given application blanks, a Supply of which will, bt available at Cache Valley banks within a few days. The stockmen, provided their security Is sound, can negotiate loans in large or small amounts. They must subscribe to stock in the new company, aggregating 10 per cent ol the amount of their loan, Mr. Champ said. To make clearer tc persons in making loans the nature of the new companys activity, Mr. Champ will be glad to have all interested discuss their problems with him at the Cacht Valley bank. The new loan company will be ready to function next week, officials anticipate. Funds available from the Reconstruction Finance corporation for livestock feeding and other relief will be determined solely by the number and amount of loans asked for through the new livestock loan company organized to serve principally Utah and Idaho. The funds are not being allocated by districts. W. L. Partner managing director of the Salt Lake branch of the Federal Reserve bank has been instructed to take charge of the clearance of all loans made in this territory through the Federal Reserve branch at Salt Lake. After security offered for any desired loan has been properly examined and appraised by officials of the loan company, loans will come direct from Washington, under the new plan 0( Uvestick financial aid. . Ark . Feb. 12 Senator Borah of Idaho, to- . . day was charged with indirect ( for the responsibility present TWell jV. e trouble, along with former Senator James of Missouri, in an open letter written by Dr. D. Y. Thomas, proThe M. I. A. of the Logan fessor of history and political Twelf'h ward is giving a series ; science at the University of Ar- of dfcightful parties at the ward i kansas. amusement hall. The last one was Senator last week when a snow carnival r The letter critized Borah's attitude toward the pres- was given while the next one will ent situation in ,the far east and be an M. Men entertainment Feb-- , 'r toward an economic boycott, which ruary 26. Mrs. Lavon Owens presided ov-the Idaho senator has opposed. It stated further that "the Unit- er the dance last week as Snow ed States failure to enter the Queen. The crowning of Mrs. League of Nations largely was due Owens was a feature of the pap- to Senator Borah's opposition. ty. j (U R) Chinese-Japanes- th Ward M.I Gives Party Series |