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Show rrrs Grain Range PRESS BY UNITED High Open May July .605-- 8 Sept. .. 62 .64 2 8 Volume 23. .60 .62 .64 4 5-- 8 8 Low .60 .62 .641-- Close 8 .601-- 2 8 .62 8 4 .641-- 4 tie IeraM JouimaJ With which are combined the Cache Valley Daily Herald, the Daily Herald and The Journal Number LOGAN, UTAH. FRIDAY, MARCH 60. BY UNITED Ry Arthur Brisbane (Copyright, 1932) False Clues Dangerous. Sugar and Foreign Labor. Mr. Sloans Explanation. Fsefui, Excited Mole- cules. SUDDENLY I Herald-Journ- It is announced that all mail addressed to Colonel and Mrs. Lindbergh will be opened by them or members of their family. This should reassure the abductors, interested in communicating with Colonel Lindbergh. The underworld characters chohave sen to act as nut produced results as yet. If the kidnapers were amateur criminals, the professional underworld men probably will not be able L help. They may be of use if the kidnapers were professionals. Through the window of the newspaper office in which this is written, you ran see a steamer of the ward line just below the old Brooklyn bridge, unloading 30,000 resacks- - three million pounds-- of fined sugar, brought from abroad This sugar is landed opposite to the American refineries of the National and American sugar refining companies on the other side of the East river. This means that American supplies were not bought, American labor was not hired, American machinery and capital were net used to refine that sugar which Americans will eat. This country supplies the world's great market for raw sugar and has been a refiner of sugar for two hundred years. Countries that produce raw sugar should be content to find here a market for their product, and not seek to destroy the refining industry which is the United States' share of sugar, production. Take s Heartfailure al Chairman LOS ANGELES, Mur. 11. H. Canfield, 52, chairman of the board of the newspapers, died early today of a heart ailment after an illness of three months. He leaves a widow, Mrs. Jessica Canfield, who was at his bedside in their apartment in the exclusive hotel. downtown Two sisters, Misses Hattie and Alice Canfield, of Santa Barbara, California, also survive. Mr. Canfield made his home in Santa Barbara and Los Angeles. S. S. Hahn, legal counsel for the d newspapers, announced that E. W. Seripps, of Seattle and San Diego, son of Mrs. Josephine Seripps, majority stockd holder, would succeed Mr. as chairman. Mr. Seripps is now treasurer of the corporation. Mr. Canfield had been chairman d of newspapers for nine years. The company publishes in 13 cities of California and other western states. (;.l!i-By- Scripps-Can-fiel- SPEAKER AT E Seripps-Canfiel- Can-fiel- Seripps-Canfiel- SLUMP KILLS KINGSTON, Mass., Mareh 11. MO In the cause of thrift, the has Kingston police department decided to abandon its flying In other words, you squadron. can buy the department's motorcycle at a reasonable figure. 64,000 FOR TREES Paris PARIS, March. 11. trees will receive $04,000 this yeal substitution for transplanting, and cleaning purposes. In must cases the paulownia will replai e the ailanthus and plane trees the elm, because they suffer less from the dust. The paulownia and the plane tree also will be substituted now in for the horse chestnut, in the city. superabundance (Ii.l-i- STUDY GARDENS LINCOLN, Neb., March 11. tlJfi Gardens und gardening have been made the subject lor study by the 13,000 members of women's project clubs in - Nebraska, for the month of Mareh. The subject matter of the club lessons was substituted for the usual work on home management, food, clothing and home beautification. No Meeting To Ie Saturday Night For Cache With l)r. Richard K. Lyman of the Quorum of the Twelve, and another representative of the geuerul authorities of the L. I). S. church in Salt Lake City, in attendance, Cache stake quarterly conference will be held in the Logan tabernacle Sunday. This announcement was made Friday morning by Stake President Joseph K. Cardon. Th re will be no session Saturday night. Conference general sessions will he held Sunday at in a m and 2 p m. with a stake M I. A. conjoint assembly at 7:30 p. m. Music for the Sunday morning and Sunday afternoon gatherings will be furnished by the combined choirs of Hyde Park, North Logan, and Benson wards. The evening assembly, under the auspices of the stake mutuals will feature a pageant developing the principles taught in the Word of Saint preWisdom, a Latter-dacept. Miss Wanda Robertson will be the reader for this number. Special music is being arranged under the direction ot Prot. N. vV. of the ttah Slate Christiansen Agricultural college. Apostle Lyman will be one of the speakers. y PACT . r, two-mil- o Scotland, OPPOSITION Calif-forni- a (1.19--Th- e old-ag- AIR BUSINESSWOMEN FAMED OARSMAN The LONDON, March, 11 (UR) now famous author of "Journeys End, K. C. Sherriff, is prominent in rowing circles here both as coach and as No. 7 in the New College, Oxford, boat. TO BE KEPT UP Captain Russell L. Maughan is chief of the aeronatics division, department of commerce and communication for the government of the Phillipine islands, according to information received by Floyd Davis, secretary of the Utah Stati MONKEY DEAD assoei-tion- . LONDON, March, 11 11- 9- The Agricultural college alumni only monkey to fly the Atlantic, He is stationed at Manila, P .1., Bert Hinkler's marmoset, which was in the cockpit during the Brit- at the present time. Mr. Maughan ish airman's crossing of is a graduate of the college in the the South Atlantic, has jus died. class of 1917 and is a life member of the alumni association. LIVED IN IRON Lieutenant Dresden Crngun, a I 11 (I ' graduate of the institution in the WATERTON, Wis., March A small bug. enclosed in an iron same class as Capt. Maughan, has casting for 15 years, was found recently been transferred to the alive when employes of the G. B war zone in China. He has also Lewis company, here, were scrap- been stationed in the Phillipine ing a piece of machinery. Islands. AID UNEMPLOYED The Logan Business and Professional Women's club, anxious to cooperate with other service clubs, responded to a call made through the President of the State Federation Mias Laveta Wallace, to give help through the club's organization to relief of the unemployed in the local communities. The membership of this club is 52. Every member ia giving then-- . 2 to 3 per cent of her monthly salary for a period of from 4 to 6 months to the fund of the unemployed. Since most of this fund is used for the men in the community nnd feeling that there were many women who should ike to get something to do, the chairman cf the public relations committee, Mrs. Claire N. Hulme, acting unthe der general direction of thj community unemployed chairman, established a Wanted Help Bureau, for women. She kept a list of the women who wanted work and a list of the women who wanted help and in this way was nble to crente many places of genuine help. Women like to appeal to an understanding person of their own sex who can better understand their problems than can men. This service bureau was given in addilion to a full days program of work of the Public Relations chairman but in spite of the added burden the chairman was happy in the good she hud done. Despite the fact that for the children's roomequipment at the Cache county library has been the purchased, Logan Business and Professional Women's club library project is by no means ended, according to Mrs. Blanche Condit Pittman, president of the club. The library project is the one continuing work of the club, keeping up from year to year. Tables, chairs and glassed bookcases have all been purchased but Mrs. Pittman says that these are only the beginning of greater things contemplated for the children's room by the club. now j Nature Plays Queer Pranks In California CALIPATRIA, Calif., March 11. U.Ki Nature has played remarkable pranks on California. In designing this old earth, she placed the highest and lowest spots within these 48 states only 60 miles apart Mt. Whitney and Death "valley. As an afterthought, she added ML Lassen, only active volcano within the same boundaries, and a sprinkle of miniature volcanos at the southern end of the Imperial valley, near here. These spouting geysers of mud from a distance look exactly like their immensely larger counterparts. but range in size from one to eight feet. They spout and sputter, emit clouds of steam and Many years ago, the gulf of pour mud streams down their California reached nearly a hun- ( ! I slopes. This strange sight Is presented on the shore of Salton sea, 100 feet ' below sea level, 11 miles north and west of Calipatria. For acres innumerable live and extinct craters can be seen. Credit for the discovery of the volcanos is given an army officer, at Fort Yuma, who, stationed Ariz., 20 years ago, decided to investigate huge clouds of steam he saw rising across the desert to the west. Scientists have accounted for the volcanic action in this into miles California. dred Changes in the earth's structure brought the valley out of the ocean, and Salton sea evaporated until it was not much more than lake. a Some 20 years ago, the Colorado river jumped its banks and again flooded the valley. In these years, the Colorado had piled billions of tons of silt on the valley floor. The weight caused generation of heat through pressure and and water earth readjustments, the deep strata, is penetrating turned to steam, to pour out of the ground as mud volcanos. good-size- d Price fic -- -- curly-haire- ,a Of Little Playmate Bitz Go On Trial On Rum Indictment d Charlie Lindbergh, Jr, and his black, Scuttle, Skeet. Everywhere the baby weld, the dog was sure to go! Today the child has disappeared as if the earth has swallowed hun, and tile dog remains, with the world outside saying insinuatingly, "He was in the house yet he didn't bark when Hie kidnapers took the ihild!" "But Skeet was in tin dining room with all of us during dinner," Lindy has given tile pel a perfect alibi. For there is a long living room and a spacious hall between the dining room and the closed door upstairs behind which kidnapers took the child. MISSES HIS PLAI M TE Now Skeet patters restlessly from room to room in the Lindbergh home, as if looking for his little playmate. Whenever two or three people begin to converse, he stops, tilting his little head inquiringly to one side, as if listening intently to hear news of his little lost master. The only time he evinces the least interest in life is when Lindv starts outdoors for one of his restless, swiit tramps of brief relief the woods behind tiic through house. Skeet forward jumps eagerly, as if to offer his services To date, Lindy has always taken the little black fellow with him. He heels Lindy every step of the way, never dashing off to hum cats, as he used to do. Skeet is practically the same age as little Charlie, and has always been with him. AN INSEPARABLE PAIR When he was a little puppy, wabbling on his short black legs, curly-haire- DIES PROJECT FIVE OCLOCK EDITION JULIA BLANS1IARD NEA Service Writer another We." It consisted of fair, little, On As chairman of the board of the d of newspapers, which the Herald Journal was a member, Mr. Canfield has been in On each Logan several times. visit he commented on the strikof this city and its ing beauty cleanly appearance. SAVED LIFE He was especially laudatory of MIDDLEBURG, Pa., March 11 SON OF FAMOUS the attractive temple grounds, de20 A (LUO miles away is fuse claring it to be among the most credited with saving the life of scenes beautiful eer seen he had laLaw makers should see to it his extensive travels in this and Thomas Mitchell, Iniddleburg was CHARACTER DIES that refining which pays over on borer, when an iron bar he seventeen million dollars for labor other countries. carrying came in contact with a and over four hundred millions for The high tension electric line. this country, is materials used-icontact blew out the fuse and GILROY. Cal., March 11 (l'R Mitproperly portected against cheap- GUNMAN broke the electric circuit. IN Rose of the Rancho's son is dead. er, competing labor represented in chell suffered leg and arm burns. In the shadows of the crumBUgar from foreign refineries. bling arches of old Mission San SUICIDE Juan Bautista they have buried COMPLAINT Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., head of the de GuadaVINEGAR HILL, Durham, Eng., Poiicronio Escoiastico big General Motors corporation, 81 year old son of March 11. (LUO The thousand in- lupe Anzar, tells Samuel Crowther that our Maria Antonio Castro, famed as are partly economic difficulties SAN ROSA, Calif., Mar. 11 (f.pi habitants of this picturesque ham- the true life heroine of "Rose of to rural techof financial their due to failure A fugitive gunman died in a let are complaining the Rancho, Richard Walton Tuy-ly'- s nique to keep pace with develop- hospital today of a bullet wound council because they have no parfamous drama. sano no no barber, ment of machine technique." son, doctor, inflicted after he had Anzar lived and died on the vast bus no no and main It is plain that engineering and killed his young womanassertedly road, loon, confedwhich his scientific genius splendidly rep- erate in a suicide pact to service, and the nearest link with Rancho dc las Aromas, Don Juan Baua rough resented in Mr. Sloans General a posse of deputy sheriffs. escape civilization necessitates tista de Anzar, received a3 a grant walk. Motors laboratories and engineerThe gunman, tentatively identiIt was from the King of Spain. ing staff has gone ahead of our fied as James Mooney, four times the life on this boundless domain financial power to think and fore- San Francisco convict, and forin his immortalized that Tuily BELL STILL RINGS see. mer Wenatchie, Washington, aviaplav. Belasco produced it in 1906. LOSSIEMOUTH, tor, succumbed a few hours after Don Juan, known as the first Lady Gordon," a The Dinosaur grew too big for he was captured in the Santa March 11. (L.tO explorer of California, kept ils brain nnd died off. Even the Clara foothills with the body of bel! weighing over a quarter of white first started a record of his travels. These reca hundredweight, Dinosaur that developed a sub- his slain companion beside him. discovered years later in old ringing in 178a and can still be ords, sidiary brain half way down its MacDonald's Mexiea City libraries, necessitated at heard carRamsay to the small way gave spine much of the history of Scottish home, "The Hillocks, as nivorous creature that gnawed its it rings in its turret at Lossie- the North American continent. SALES TAX GETS feet. Maria Antonio Castro Anzar mouth railroad station. This nation seems to have outRose of the Rancho was the grown its brains, and the CarniCastro, daughter of Gen. Jose MUCH vorous tribe of bootleggers, gangCOLLEGE FRENCH early California governor and opsters, short sellers of stocks, and 11 March Mass., C. WORCESTER, of Fremont Gen. John ponent are acschemers U'Pi Assumption college here is in the historic battle of San Junn tive. the only French college in the Guadalupe Anzar was born in WASHINGTON, March 11 United States. Its president, the 1851 in the old Plaza Hotel at San A Russian scientist. Dr. Frankel. LaGuardia. Rep., Rev. Crescent recentL. Armanet, Juan Bautista, which was owned that other New York, announced today that developing a theory the honor of by his lather, Don Miguel, who, scientists take seriously, attributes a liberal group in the house hud ly was awarded the d'Academie" "Officer with Anzar's uncle, Father Jose by the sales tax light to the excitation of mole- organized intothefight new revenue bill. French Ministry of Education and Antonio de Anzar, came to cules." The atoms get excited and proposed from Old Mexico in 1833. LaGuardia predicted defeat of Fine Arts. light is produced somewhat as Jose de Anzar was the last of when a player excites the chords the sales tax and formulated a the Franciscan padres at Mission RADIO CLUB of a violin, sound is produced. substitute for it. "It is my personal opinion after ACCRINGTON, Lancashire, Eng. San Juan Bautista. Light is a phenomenon produced conferences with my colleagues in March 11. fire station by excited molecules. We should all be grateful for the house that the sales feature in this town houses a radio club will be " eliminated old from for the bill folk, governed by a com- MAUGHAN this molecular excitement. WithHEADS e mittee of six out it, wc could not see each the New Yorker declared. pensioners, who have fixed the membership other, the sky, the sistine chapel fee at one penny (two cents) anthe Taj Mahal, Pike's Peak, or ISLAND FORCE nually. Dempsey and Tunney. LIBRARY Seripps-Canfiel- 932. HOPEWELL, N. J., March 11 Until a week or so ago there was a second inseparable combination in the Lindbergh home here, ron d 1 Skeets Mourns Loss HV 20. REVENUES .SHRINK OLYMPIA. Wash., March. 11. UT!i tax revenues Washington from all sources have shrunk e nearly $7,000,000 from an peak reached in 1029, according to recent reports isued by state officials. Collections for 1032 were estimated at $73,356,713. 1, a Boy and His Dog Jr, Separated by Kidnaping of Lindy, . . PRESS TtT.II FESTIVAL HOLLAND. Mich., March 11 vfl'i - The annual tulip festival, drawing immense crowds from Western Indiana and Michigan, Northern Chicago, will bo Held Mav 13 to 1 Another We Flashes Today . Todays News Another "we" pair Is broken up. Page one, column live. Spitale, d Charles Augustus Lindliergh, Jr., a sion of George ( lark, llerald-Johe would romp up in friendly manner to anybody approaching the farmhouse which the Lindberghs rented outside of Princeton. "Skeet always plays with little Charlie." the butler told me at this time. "He gets right into the play yard with the baby when he's out in the yard under Hint big elm. Charlie loves to pull him and push him and he never resents it." were the child So inseparable and dog that when the baby was at Englewood, so picas Skeet. When they brought him down here for a week end at his father's and mothers home here, Skeet came too. SKEET SHARED ADVENTURE" Last summer, when Anne and Lindy took off for their Oriental the trip and the baby was with flew Morrows in Maine, airplanes u ... nd Skeet NEA rnal HOPEWELL, N. J., Mar. 11 (UP) The trail of the Baby Lindbergh kidnapers turned towards Detroit today. It developed that Col. Lindbergh's underworld Salvatore Spitale and Irving Bitz, have leads which will take them to the Michigan city soon. Spitale and Bitz are among a group of 16 indicted on liquor conspiracy charges in Brooklyn. They are listed under fictitious names but the defense counsel confirmed today that the pair are listed, and that they "plan to go to Detroit in a crayon impresas soon as this matter is disposed Service staff artist. of. low over the estate trying to get pictures of the baby. Betty Gow had just wheeled little Lindy out under the trees and Skeet was frisking about when she heard the planes overhead. She started on a run for the house, pushing the baby carriage rapidly. But even in such an emcr gency, she remembered the other half of the "We" combination. She stopped long enough tq grab up the little black fellow and throw him into the carriage on top of Charlie. Everywhere Charlie went, Skeet had to go! He never was a watch dog. He was never meant for one. His whole life has been among friendly folk. His whole career was just being the happy lesser Jialf of "We. Now, dejected, he sadly awaits reunion with his little Hyrum M. . A. Wards Sponsor S11KIT5.IL.. South Cache Band Conceit USAC FINISH Spitale is listed in the Brooklyn case as James Martin, and Bitz as Morris Grossman, in a case involving seizure of 190 cases of liquor aboard a schooner on a Brooklyn beach last year. One man was wounded in an exchange of shots between the po-lice and the alleged rum runners. Before the trial started today, Spitale's attorney verified that the two were in the indicted group and added: They have a lead which will take them to Detroit just as soon as the case against them here has been completed. I cannot discuss the nature of this information, but they plan to go to Detroit as soon as this matter is disposed of." HATCH ELECTED GOLF PRESIDENT Election of H. J. Hatch, vice ' president of Thatcher Bank and Trust company, to succeed P. V. Cardon, director of the Utah station at the USAC, as president of the Logan Golf club corporation was a feature of a business meeting of the club directorate Thursday evening at the Chamber of Commerce. President Cardon presented his resignation at this time to enable him to make preparations to leave Logan early in July for a year's leave of absence which has been granted him by the college board of trustees. He still retains a on the board of directors ofplace the organization. Wallace Carlisle, manager of the Hotel Eccles, was named secretary succeeding Waldo Hatch who has moved to New York City. Plans for spring and summer development activity of the new nine-hol- e golf course project east of the Utah State Agricultural college which was laid out by one of Americas best golf course architects last summer was discussed. The project is entirely a com- - I munity enterprise and has been backed by the Chamber of Commerce and many other civic groups as well as leading business men of Logan. A plot of 500 acres has been deeded to the gold corporation for a period of 50 years with no rental fee. Work of laying out a nine hole course and preparing the ground for necessary fairways and seeding to grass was undertaken last summer with an expenditure of $5,000. Most of this sum was expended for local labor on the projecL and was a substantial means toward unemployment relief during the 1931 season. Completion of the work on the course as funds permit through the drive soon to be conducted for additional members and financial aid is expected to give Logan one courses in of the finest nine-hol- e the state Those who have been working on the project have long felt that a community of Logan's population and the territory which this community serves should have its golf course. Work on the course will be pushed with a view to devloping probably two of the fairways for use of golfers by next summer. Present members of the board of directors are: P. V. Cardon, A. F. Stockton, who is also vice president: H. j. Hatch, Asa Bullen, Wallace J. Carlisle, J. W. Hayward, C. L. Jones, FYed Lund-berM. R. Merrill, John H. Moser, John H. Wilson, Dr. C. C. Randall, Coach E. L. Romney of the USAC, Alvin H. Thompson, and A. H. Palmer. Mr. Wilson was named to succeed Olof Nelson, and Mr. Palmer to succeed Waldo M. Hatch. Other members of the board were retained. This band has a membership of 60 with a complete instrumentation and has made several appearances in concerts recently to large and appreciative audiences. The following program will be Students at the Utah State Agripresented: Graiui ia cultural college were winding up March, Washington's Grays ER- Snow the winter quarter's work today Oh, My Father preparatory to the opening of the Special Band Arrangement E spring quarter on Monday. Selections, Songs from the Old Folks Llewellyn Final examinations have been Saxophone solo. My Regards the order of business during the Dorothy White week and rFXu entire Overture, Light r'avalry activities have been at a miniVocal solo, A Dream um. Albert Fallows . Zarn?, Registration for the spring quarSpirit of American Patrol ter will take place Monday, acTrumpet solo, The Rosary Evan Green cording to Registrar W. H. Bell. Bellini The quarter will continue until ; Overture, Norma Friday, May 26. Euphonium solo, Come Baek to Erin. Officials of the college expect Clark Peterson Yradicr the usual small decrease in enSelection, La Ialoma Southwell rollment during the coming quarSousaphone solo, Natoma ter because of the students who Dean Thorpe FYivil discontinue to begin work on the Selections from High Jinks farms. However, indications are March, Stars and Stripes Forever that a number of new students will enroll for one quarter courses offered in practically all departments. MARKETS GIVE IN commencement The program 26 with the on will WORK SunsetbeginFestival, Mayannual producU. S. tion of the music department. The commencement program and alijm-n- i March 11, (I'D banquet and ball will be held DETROIT, (1.19-WASHINGTON. Mar. 11 has become an impor- on May 27 with the baccalaureate Marketing indiis Sunday, May 28. shortage of waterfowl tant business in Detroit during sermon on interThere will be a cated in reports to the United the depression, providing work Slates Biological Survey. for hundreds left jobless as other val between the close of the spring in industrial projects collapsed. quarter and the beginning of the Flights und concentrations various sections of this country George V. Branch, director o. summer session. were generally smaller last full the municipal bureau of markets, than in pievums years, the Sur- reported a 23.8 per cent gain in vey reports. Shortages were espeproduce and poultry sold in three MOTHER cially severe among canvasbucks, markets during 1931. He estimatbirds redheads and lesser scaups, ed the value of goods sold during whose breeding ranges are largely the year at $3, 000, (MX). SON and in the A majority of those tending in the Northwest prairie provinces of Canada, the stalls now, according to Branch They aieas most seriously affected by once worked in factories. the long dry season. were thrown out of work with the FORT MADISON, Ia.. March soil to the and turned In a few regions unusually large depression 11. d'.Ri The state penitentiary, local concentrations have been ob- for a living, the director said. filled out with here, is built on a hill, rising from served, but these, the Bureau exQuestionnaires that borders the plains, are a result of mild wea- applications for market space in- the swamp-lan- d ther and of the great reduction iu dicate many of the stall operators surging Mississippi. Euin the top of the the at In on farms water and food aieas that follow- formerly worked prison hill is Jean Farneli, serving an ed the dry season. By these in- rope. Branch disclosed. one of Branch said small communities indeterminate sentence dications, the Bureau adds, many have concluded that the number of former factory workers have year to life. in the Detroit In a tiny dilapidated shanty on if waterfowl has increased, where- been established as, excent in limited regions, uurks area. They are up with the dawn the swampland at the foot of the and butter were far less plentiful than in now, he said, carting hill is Jeans mother, waiting for oast seasons. her son's release. eggs to market. The Bureau believes hunters She is Kate Farneli. Already she have generally observed the shorthas waited nine years for her son. ened 1931 hunting season, and that CUPID IN Only time can tell how much this factor, coupled with the mild longer her vigil will be. weather the country has experiKate Farneli Is alone in the has of a effected BATTLE enced, world, save for her imprisoned ROYALTY saving ducks which will be able to reboy. Her husband drowned years turn to their nesting grounds in finds work enough She ago. the spring. and washing LONDON, Mar. II (I'D Ro- scrubbing floors mance triumphed over rigid rules dishes to buy meager fare for her Prince lonely table and have enough left of royalty today when I.cnnard of Sweden, renouncing over for the fund from which she in pays a lawyer to present her son's married his royal rights, was a civil ceremony to Miss Karin case to pardon and parole authorities. Nisszatz. Some day he will be free," said Although the marriage did not (By United Press) have royal approval, the newly- Kate, stooped from hard work stock market weds were made happy just before and NEW YORK-T- he d I from years. today continued its decline. Prices leaving on their honeymoon when can wait. And whv shoudn't I gradually eased to lower level. they received best wishes from wait here? I am near l.im. I can UTAH Unsettled tonight and Vaiume was small. King Gustav of Sweden, grand- leeD him from losing hope. American telephone was down to father of the prince, indicating Farneli was convicted on a Saturday; little change In temper- A ..... 128 and other utilities followed. the royal forgiveness. ature, statutory charge. HYRUM Under the direction of the M. I. A. organizations of the Hyrum wards, a band concert will be given in the Hyrum Third ward chapel Sunday at 7:30 p. m. by the South Cache high school band with W. H. Terry conducting TERM TODAY - extra-curricu- la - WATERFOWL SHOW DROP JOBLESS one-wee- k AWAITS AT PRISON ' WINS g, gray-haire- 3-- 8 The Weather |