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Show f The Weather 1 he Mer UTAH. Fair tonight and Saturday; little change in temperature Volume 24. Number 58. M LOGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH UTAH, 10, l 9 nm 8 Grain Range markets and stock exchanges throughout the nation were closed today following the nation-wid- e bank holiday Ail PRICE FIVE CENTS - Today ROOSEVELT 1933). Just Like Sunday. Good Resolutions. Why Do We All Worry? For Middle-Age- d Women LOS ANGELES When money does nt)t circulate, men, automobiles and goods do not circulate. In many American cities the past few days have seemed like Sunday. Everything quiet, everybody anxiously asking somebody else some question. ' Mr. Meanwhile, the president, Woodin, secretary of the treasury, and other wise ones are straightening out the tangle. . Many Americans are now making solemn, soulful resolutions. If 1 ever get it again, X shall know enough to keep it. Nobody will ever persuade me to run ri8ks when I have all I read,' need. Somebody else can have .he imaginary profits. But these resolutions will all melt as others have melted when the national sun shines once more, prices go up, business revives, dividends reappear, good wages come baclf. When tne devil is sick he decides to become a Monk, according He has been to the old saying. sick often, but he has never really become a Monk. . One thing that Americans should ask themselves is this: Why do- we organize our lives on a basis of permanent worry? i In other countries, England, Germany, France, Italy, men map out a budget of life as well as financial budget. They plan to work, hard, for a certain length of time, then enjoy peace, the-- - real life that comes with freedom from anxiety. In this country the farther we go into old age, the more we plan, the more we reach out, and the i more we worry. When you see an old man's funeral in America you may say to yourself, there goes one who has only just stopped worrying. - II " King George is recovering from a cold. Perhaps with all this excitement you didnt know he had one,. but be did, and several doctors tell you he ts getting better. Other European news reports that Austria and Germany are again talking of getting together. France vetoed that some time ago, but vetoes have become less important, since the League of Nations vetoed Japan's trip to China and Japan went cheerfully ahead. Mr Hitler who was to go to Geneva to (liscuss disarmament with the League of Nations says he will not go unless Mussolini also goes in person. M. Hitler apparently believes that dictators should get together. That is the difference between Hitler and Mussolini. If Mussolini wanted to go anywhere he would go, not caring who else went or stayed. He would say with Dante K I go, who remains. If I stay, who is there to go. ns the grim man of action, the affable friend, the forward-lookinoptimist, the purposeful statesman and the analytical executive. g Sweeping Economies To Be Enforced In Government Applications Must Go Through Proper Channels WASHINGTON, March 10 (1 li President Roosevelt today asked the congress for the power of a redictator in administering ductions in veterans expenditures, government salaries and balancing It is a matter of only a few das at the mod when the banking machinery of the will le operating country again at full speed, Secretary WASHINGTON, Mar. , the budget. The legislation giving him authority had not been completed when the presidents message was delivered. The senate recessed until tomorrow while the house arranged for a special committee to jam through the legislation when ever it is completed. While the senate is in recess, its finance committee will consider budget recommendations. Mr. Roosevelt, taking one thing at a time in his drive for readjustment of government to meet the BY WILLIS THORNTON economic crisis, devoted today's message to budget retrenchment WASHINGTON, Mar. 10 Only which, he said, must be made to one thing has been uniformly true of the recovery from past depressaleguard the nations credit The next White House move to sions in the United States. That follow the banking and budget is the fact of recovery itself, and legislation will be for a 500,000,000 the fact that it was always under bond issue to aid unemployment way before it was generally reaAn indication that opposition lized. would develop to Mr. Roosevelt's In detail, the manner of recovrecommendations for cuts in vet- ery has varied. In several cases erans benefits came in a state- there seems no doubt that the ment from Senator Robinson, Re- natural optimism and pep of a publican, Indiana, who declared it young people with a continent in would be cowardly for congress to which to expand, automatically accede to the presidents plan. pulled us out without our doing America wants no dictator," he anything very definite about it. said. But there are also cases where conscious effort, both legislative and private, turned the tide. In fact the very first depression ROOSEVELT the country had, one which started in 1819 and continued through was largely relieved by an BOMB IS FOUND 1820, act of Congress for the relief of public land debtors, who had been squeezed by a decline in land priland WATERTOWN, N, Y. Mar. 10 ces after having bought U.Ri A bomb addressed to Presifrom the government. dent Roosevelt was found in the TKEIDRY w... postoffice here this week, it was ESTABLISHED reported reliably today. Congress was again largely inTwo weeks ago, before Mr. strumental in pulling the country Roosevelt was inaugurated, a crude out of the panic of '37. For it was bomb addressed to him in Washat this time that it established the ington and mailed in Watertown independent treasury as we know was found in the Washington it today. Previously federal funds in private had been deposited postoffice. A postal inspector, here seeking banks, especially . the federally-charterthe sender of the first bomb, reBank of the United fused to discuss the report of the States. second, but it was understood that there was every indication the same person had mailed both bombs. Police refused to discuss the Scrip Issued LOGAN And New Projects Give By Chamber CHOSEN FOR Basis For Faith In Future Has Backing WINS NEW -t, Hashes ZANGARA GIVEN DEATH SENTENCE The great expansion to the west in 1879 was of course the main dething that ended thein terrible 73. pression that began As settlers opened more land they needed more railroads, plows, all kinds of manufactured products. The manufacturing centers provided them and the depression vanished. But even here it should be noted that real recovery did not set in until '79, when specie and payment had been resumed, basis. money stabilized on a firm GOLD N tV HELPED next major depression, The which opened in 93, again reached its turn in 96, before anyone realized what was happening. Discovery of gold in South Africa and in Cripple Creek, Col., and extraction process the cyanide gave gold production a big boost just when more goldbasewas badly Victory needed as a money sound money for McKinleys became posin thus '96, program sible, and a wheat crop failure In India helped 'force wheat, up- - from 53 cents at Chicago in August to 90 cents before November. It was at this time, too, that the industrial south began to emerge from War stage. il the dormant Thus the cycle. Nobody knows enough about it yet to reduce it to a formula. But certain general lines begin to appear which give genuine hope of emergence from the present impasse, and of at least some control over the future cycle. WARS BRING post-Civ- LOGAN SCHOLARSHIP William E. Morrell, son of Mr. was and Mrs. J W. Morrell, chosen by the local chapter of I'hi Kappa Phi as the candidate from the Utah State Agricultural college for the Sparks Memorial 1hi rvappa Phi graduate fellowship. lor the promotion of advanced scholarship especially, tnc national organization ha, PLAN NEW DRIVE FOR SHORT WEEK I VANGUARDS HOLD estab- an endowment called the Sparks Memorial Phi Kappa Pin endowment graduate fellowship named m honor of Dr. E. t). Spin ks, who was president general ol the organization from 1911 to 1919. The proceeds of this trust fund, with apportionments from olier sources are for the granting of annual awards for graduate study. The two applicants considered the most worthy of receiving one of these fellowships will be de cided from the 47 active chapters in the, United . States. ...who - will, submit candidates. The fellowship committee shall give primary consideration to the applicant s promise of success in graduate work as scholastic revealed by previous record and the merit or excellance of the proposed plan of graduate Each scholarship entities study. the holder to one year's graduate work at any institution he desires and he receives 500 in cash. The local chapter of Phi Kappa Phi feels that Mr. Morrell is well quuhfied for this honor. He has been very active in school activities, having been a member of the debating squad for four years, winner of the Scholarship A, and a "Student Life staff award He now in his Treshman year. the holds the scholarship from class of 1927, for this year.. Mr. of the Delta member Morrell is a lished Swiss-Germ- MIAMI, Fla., March 10 U.E Giuseppi Zangara was sentenced to death in the electric chair today for the murder of Mayor Anton J. Cermak of Chicago, whom he shot here February 15 in an attempt to assassinate Franklin D. Roosevelt, then president-elec- t. Circuit Judge Thompson ordered Zangara to stand to be sentenced shortly after he convened court. He read the sentence of death slowly. Defiantly, Zangara shouted: You give me electric chair? I did, Judge Thompson replied. I no scared of electric chair. I do whats right. A capitalist is crooked. You is crooked man too. You capitalist. Put me in electric chair. I no care. YOUTH Mrs. G. W. States, Mrs. Ray Hawkes, W. G. Amos, Spencer Ernest Gilbert. Felsbed, Annie Moore, Mrs. Lillie Smith, Dr. O. R. Cutler, A. W. Hart. A H. Jensen, A. H. Gassmann, Roy Tanner, Earl Shumway and R. F. Campbell. cere-mon- .- Heteewa , flad itMtait&a later brought out that the officers were not in uniform, that they had accosted Helegsen with guns while he was taking his usual evening walk to free his lungs of lead paint breathed in during the day and that he was a man of unimpeachable character. He had probably run from the officers, thinking they were holdup men. inPowell was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter and given a suspended sentence. The civil IN OGDEN post-offic- end-me- Preston Resident Jaid To Final Rest y, RELIEF ! . PROVIDENCE A poultry meeting will be held in the town hall at .Providence at 8 p. m. tonight, according to announcement of County Agent R.L. Wrigley. Carl Frisqhneckt of the USAC, E. H. Elliot of the Utah Poultry Producers association. Dr. W. O. Wennergren and County Agent R. L. Wrigley will be the speakers. Brooding and raising of baby chicks, poultry diseases and the current outlook for the industry will be the chief topics of discussion. C. C. Clawson of Providence will be In charge. SHOPLIFTER IS FOR STRING CHOIR POULTRYMEN MEET GIRLS CAUGHT 1 ARRIVES By United Press The AmeAcan banking system was today under the dominance of President Roosevelt and the treasury department, by virtue of sweeping powers granted the administration by emergency legislation. developments Supplementary growing out of the new money were: "dictatorship 1 The federal government hurto deterried an investigation mine which banks are sound enough to reopen. 2 No bank will reopen befora' Saturday but hope was expressed, that a majority may resume business Monday. 3 Extension of the bank holi day indefinitely, by presidential proclamation, was for two purA to poses. investigate the condition of the banks; and B to permit sound banks to clear the way for unfinished business piled ' the holiday. oPT during G8!d 71oaraersr liUjH! v bjr fear of punishment. Were pouring metal back into the federal reserve banks in every district. 5 The federal government is printing new currency at the rale of 30,000,000 a day. IN Two young .Fran k 1 n county girls, whose names were not revealed, were safely at home today and it is hoped by local officers, considerably chastened in spirit. The two were caught by Manager Frank Earl of the College Boot Shop after they had taken a pair of shoes in the store Thursday. The two were only 16 years of age and after a good talking to, they were sent home and Sheriff YV. D. Head of Franklin county advised to keep an eye on them. INSPECTION treasury suit, which proved successful, STEAUNG SHOES MINSTREL PLANS Woodin said today. The reopening of the Woodin said, la not banks, to be accomplished in a lew hours. In general, the process will be that the secretary of will receive the through the federal reserve banks applications for reopening by banks which are memreserve bers of the federal system. These applications will be acted upon forthwith. !i the case cf the state banks, it Is provided that application will be made to the proper state authorities. 1 m POSTAL MEN FINISH SITE SUIT IN night-watchm- MANYHEAKOPEk FAUST WIDOW Mrs. Gudrun Helegsen of Logan was awarded 5,000 punitive dam250 funeral expenses ages and for the death of her husband, killed by a St. Anthony gunman, according to word received here. Mrs, Helgesen, together with Attorney L. Tom Perry, who has been handling the case, and Otto Oskar are expected to return to Logan today. They notified Mrs. Oskar here this morning of the decision of the St. Anthony court, reached late Thursday. Thus is ended one of the most brutal episodes of police cossack-isin the annals of the Intera mountain west. Helegesen, promising young artist and Interior decorator from Logan who was working in St. Anthony, was shot in the back of the bead by Grant Powoll, a St. Anthony night watchman, on suspicion of having molested two St. Anthony Eijg, an iPreston Red Cross FARM HEADS MAP Selects New Workers CAMPFIRE TUESDAY Notices have gone out from council headquarters of a Vanguard Campfire for Logan district Tuesday in the assembly room of the Logan library building. L. E. Crookston, district commissioner of Vanguards, is In charge. The campfire ceremony is exclusively for qualified registered Vanguards and leaders. The program will include: Pass fire word; opening exercises; lighting ceremony; traditions and nummusical pledge ceremony; ber, P. A. C. Pedersen; court of S. V. honor, Prows; fun songs; y. campfire program; closing Logan Chamber of Commerce scrip is backed by and commodity pa.troll checks of sound and responsible firms, approved by our special committee. No Chamber of Commerce scrip is outstanding that is not properly secured. This scrip has no connection with N.D.A. scrip. merchants Responsible will accept and pay out of Chamber Commerce scrip without discount or premium. Individuals should apply to the merchants for scrip and npt come to the Chamber of Commerce. Logan Chamber of Commerce, by II. J. Hatch, President. A large and enthusiastic audience at the Paramount theater in to the fourth Ogden listened presentation of the opera Faust, Thq opera, Thursday evening. which was given by the Utah State Agricultural college music department, under the direction of DEPRESSIONS Professors N. W. Christiansen and R. P. Condie was very well reFirst, we know that every deceived and highly praised by Ogpression is preceded by a period of frenzied finance, unthinking den, Weber, and Salt Lake music lovers and critics who were In optimism, loose banking, unjustified credit extension, and usually attendance. Among those present of low public morals. We know was the entire music faculty of NEW CURRENCY debeen the University of Utah. WASHINGTON, D. C., Mar. 10 that while there have not connectThe Ogden presentation will be (U.fi) Presses are roaring night pressions apparently 29z none less served the the final one, according to the diwith wars, every Phi fraternity, having and day bringing forth new cur- ed dea followed mishas been the war in rectors, who are well pleased with by years rency at the rate of Jour million the reception by the four large pression, and the bigger the war sion. dollars an hour. We audience- - who have witnessed the the bigger the depression; can trace another tendency: the masterproduction of Gounods 17 ARRESTED influence of foreign conditions, piece. A number of Cache valley TWIN FALLS, Mar- - 10 (U.P1 people who saw the opera In LoAssisted by local officers, federal both in starting the depression gan traveled to Ogden to see the it, has increased in enforcement officers sweeping ov- and in ending final presentation. er this section brought in one wo- strength as we have come down man and 16 men on liquor charges to the present. No major depression has ever been ended and reearly this week. BOYS GLEE CLUB covery made until money, currency, and credit were stabilized FARMER KILLED S. U. B. of the Lammer John some basis which on all America McCAMMON, Ida., Mar. 10 O'.E) treasury department and Charles GIVES Suffocated when he fell underOn F. Dutton of the postoffice (Continued 3). Page neath a horse which had broken mornleft Friday Logan through the snow, Justin Alvaro ing following three days spent One of the most creditable and Groverm, 68, Marsh Valley farm- of possible local in inspection thoroughly enjoyable school enterer, was found dead by persons a for sites postoffice. temporary tainments when of the year was the MUSIC who had gone to find him Mr. Lammer had no definite The Land of ' Cotton" he failed to return, to his home. statement to make before leaving minstrel, last evening by the Seother than to explain that several presented nior high school Grenadiers, in SMOOT COMING HOME been had sites inspected. possible hall under the direction WASHINGTON, D. C., Mar. 10 The procedure from here, he said, Nibley of Frank Baugh, Jr. with Miss (I R) Declining attractive business is that his findings go to the Blanche Cardon as accompanist. offers in New YorU and Chicago, which pre- This postoffice department glee club, consisting of thirty-fiv- e Senator Reed Smoot is returning The same N. B. C. arrange- pares specifications. junior and senior boys. Is a to Salt Lake City to devote his ment of Silver Threads Among Then bids are called for. If a bid no credit organiza- future time to church work. the Gold that brought 50,000 re- is accepted, the postoffice quarters voluntary, tion. quests for a repetition will be one are temporarily moved while the The minstrel furnished an hour GRAZING FEES REMAIN of the first numbers that the Lo- new postoffice addition is being WASHINGTON, D. C Mar. 10 gan String Choir will begin work built. If it is found that money packed with chuckles and hearty as well as harmony. The laughs e (L'.PI The grazing fees will remain on, according to Isadore Shoore, can be saved by leaving the William Stewart, the same as formerly at least conducter. in the federal building and six Other music that arrived from paying the contractor something Robert Harrison, Harold Hanson, during the first part of 1933, Clarence Grant Smith Farey, and included York Wallace week New last Secret ry of Agriculture caused extra for the trouble has decided- special string choir arrangements through inis procedure, then this Arthur Henson were as genuinely funny. Vaughan Pond was a com"Aloha Oe, of La Golondrina, will likely be carried out. petent interlocutor. Two Guitars, and some of the plan CONFESSES CRIME Solos were sung by Glen Olson, SAN DIEGO, Mar. 10 (U.PJ Stephen Foster favorites. In these Hall, Howard Smith, ClarBoyd Durant-arresteitself in is each alias James part arrangements, d Hill, Ralph ence Farey and Kent Cazier. Bill in Logan, Utah, and a solo, with the melody swinging "Stewart and Bob Harrison sang brought here on a suspicion of be- from one group of instruments to A Firemans Life, and Arthur ing the man who murdered a another, and permits a remarkable PRESTON Funeral services for Henson joined them in "A Long, theater manager here five years combination of effectiveness and Ray Alien, 45, of Preston, Idaho, Long Time. ago made a verbal confession en simplicity. The ?lubs quintet, Mondell WebAs more music is being ordered were held in the First ward chaproute from Logan here. ber, Orson Bailey, Keith Spencer, to provide each member with el Thursday. Dunk-leLeon The speakers were Joseph Fillmer, and Harold Dibble copies, other musicians who are Joseph Luthy and A. H. Jen- was one of the most melodious interested are urged to attend the numbers were of the evening. offered by next regular rehearsal at 3:30 sen. Prayers Tap oclock Sunday in the music room Fred Hawkes and L. A. Mecham. dancing numbers were supplied by Miss Mr. and was furnished Music by Mary Hansen, Ernest Tipat the Senior high school, so that ON and petts and Ray Evans. William Shumway a sufficient number may be or- Mrs. Mr. Johnson. Daniel Baugh has never shown his dered. Mr. Allen was born at Battle directing skill to better advantage More soloists are especially needWASHINGTON, Mar. 10 U.E Creek, Idaho, April 1, 1888, a son than in the harmonious ensemble ed to round out the instrumentaRepresentatives of leading farm tion, although all players are cor- of Joe and Mary Jane Sellers singing of these boyish untrained seorganizations met today in a dially invited to join. There are no Allen. He married Freida Larson voices. In the pleasure it gave cret conference with Secretary of charges save the small cost of the at Farmington, Utah, July 11, both audience and those particito 191L formulate music. pating, the Land of Cotton ranks Agriculture Wallace an agricultural relief program Surviving are his widow, three high in the seasons school imand to which they hoped children, Elsie, Floyd Dorothy present of Preston and REPEAL ORDINANCE the following mediately to congress. ANTICIPATION SALT LAKE CITY, Mar. 10 (UP) brothers and sisters: Mrs. John CURRENCY indications were that There BOISE, Mar. 10 010 To solve economists already had prepared a -- Ordinances regulating the loca- Bench, Jack Allen, Mrs. Ruby Perough draft of a measure which tion and the design of hitching terson, William Allen, all of Pres- , the currency situation in Idaho, Byron Defenbach, former state is intended to regulate this year's posts may be repealed by the city ton; Mrs. Tom Sanders, Farming-tonUtah. treasurer, has suggested the iscommission, on suggestion of the crop as well as to provide perInterment was in the Preston suance of .negotiable tax anticimanent stimulus to commodity ordinance codifier. Yep, time moves on. pation currency. cemetery. prices. . ed 10 (U.R) of Treasury Unify Of Effort , Reforms , Crescent City, California, goes back to the very early days for Citizens give each other money. clam shells, marked ten or twenty-five cents,- - signed by the individual who puts the shells in circulation. , Those worrying about the quality WASHINGTON, Mar. 10 (U.E of scrip or clearing house cer- Citing the need for restoring the tificate moqey are wasting their national morale weakened by unworry. employment, Senator Black, DemSuch money is as good as any ocrat, Alabama, today reintroducever counterif is not it had, you ed his bill to enforce the five feit and the same may be said of day, thirty hour week, In indus-tr- y. ail money. New Money that you will get The bill would prohibit inter-ta- te ifrom your bank or employer will shipments sf goods not probe as good as the money to which duced on that basis of employyou have been accustomed. ment. No money is worth more than the guarantee attached to it. PRESTON The local Red Cross organization has been reorganized. The committee consisting of Taylor Nelson, F. A. Fackrell, W. G. Palmer and J. Clifford Forsgren chose a large group of representative aids. The new committee chosen consists of C. H. Carlson, Ernest Cord, Iris Hawkes, Bertha P. APPLY FOR COT VETS worn Some foolish middle-age- d suits-thwarned by en should handa very some taxi dancer has brought against a woman of 53. The woma an, wealthy widow, was so silly and unfortunate as to believe what the young man told her. She wept' with shame when her letters to him were read in court The young "gentleman sues her for 100,000 for not keeping her It is promise to marry him. strange that any coart should be outto an such compelled to listen rageous case. The judge might well terminate the proceedings by saying to the young man six months in jail will teach you not matter. to make a fool df a woman old enough to, be your mother. -- ENTRUSTING HER FATE IS Man of many moods, grave or gay as befits the occasion, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt is shown here as he looked in recent appearances By Arthur Brisbane (Copyright, THE MAN TO WHOM AMERICA Senators Planning Bank Guarantees WASHINGTON, March 10 UJ!) Senator Vandenberg, R., Michigan, today introduced a bill for the guarantee by the government of deposits in banks. GIVEN SENTENCE time Senator Dill, D., Washington, immediately reintroduced his bill to for checking accounts Finish was written on the books up provide to 5,000 in the postal savings in the cases of six alleged shoplifters here Thursday afternoon system. when City Judge Jesse P. Rich freed one and found another, the last of the six, guilty. Joseph Jensen, who claimed he was riding with the group from Pocatello to Salt Lake, was released while Mike Cordisco, driver of the car, was found guilty and given the same sentence as three of his mates who pleaded guilty a fine of 25 and a jail sentence Yesterday, John T. Caine, audiof 90 days. The other of the sixtette, Roy tor of the Utah State Agricultural DeHill, is in jail in San Diego college, was 79 years of age. spite his advancawaiting trial for the alleged mured age, Mr. Caine der of a theater manager there is keen and alert in 1928. Hill, known there as and thoroughly James Durant, is said to have ad interested In thw mitted on the train going to Calidaily activities of fornia, that he was James Durint the state and naand the man wanted for the mur He has tion. der. connected been with the college since its beginning and has seen the various buildings rise one by one on the campus. most sincere conClassifications of the Rotary gratulations go to Mr. Caine with club were explained by J. M. a prayer he may continue for years Norfleet and O. Guy Cardon at in health and strength. noon luncheon of the club ThursMrs. Lily Neuberger McDonald day. of the Shirley Mae sales force is Mr. Norfleet, as .chairman of celebrating her birthday today. the classification committee, .was The Herald-Journa- l, Including dein charge of the program. voted husband Me, sends greetThe Girls glee club of the Lo- ings! gan high school, under the direcToday is also the birthday of tion of Frank Baugh, Jr., and strikingly beautiful Ora Miss with Idell Grander, accompanist, Younk, waitress at the Grill Cafe. furnished a much appreciated Blossoms and everything sweet musical program. (for Miss Younk! Happy-- f Birthdau! CLASSIFICATION IS EXPLAINED WWBWB Our |