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Show r The Weather Utmh Mo'-t- anu diirsiia . i din extreme probaoly- f ri tonight ott,t - pounm' u., u portion -- tonight Number mrrm i north nortn .southeast farmer northwest Volume 24. ITTrXITI XL. "r -- yri JLJLiL CUldLl il. 7:4 L O G A N. Victims Today U T T A II. Mieat May 2 8, 1 New Spirit Created by Animation ofF.D.R. ASSAULTED RODNEY Oi T( HER nal Writer W ASHING TON, Mimli 28 On a as busy as any day that sceim-ow ded life, Presiother m ins dent Roost elt suddenly leaned hai k in his i hail, suivejed a desk become ilear and pushed several buttons lit once. Come rushing Seiretuiies Howe, Milnt.vre and Kaily to the inner ll licridd-Jm- Out s. V A IkuIj Won II. I W ho Is Happiest? Yosukc Matsuoka. who ! 1 Police Kind Girl Tied I licaiiid Nile ( admin's family permit. Uf ! ' I?' hii That men up to their necks in depression, with the world topsy should concentrate heart, and soul on a glass of beer, to. amount how much they wile, siv sons und a daughter. Herald Journal Editorial Logun, March Editor, The Mr. Nile Cochran A. 28. 19'iS. president of Suit Lake C hanilip.r of Com.'telemerce, calk'd me b) alii ' phone and said tiles ftud discussed the matter of Suit Lake Citv high schooV7j(iJ not being Mrniittel tb cdinc to He the state band contest. said tliev had read the ournal editorial to their board of goveruo's and while they admitted it did look like there might be a selfish mowould .state tive back of Jt-htbit" "the Chamber "Of Commerce had nothing to do 1111 the matter at all. That it was a decision made entirely by the schools and that they were very sorry that the people of Logan got the wrong impression. He suid that their secretary had been authorized to eon-taSuperintendent Nuttnll und aihisc him that if it were a matter of fiiiaiicc'thiit was holding the West High hand from coming to Logan, that the business men would lie willing to finance tile undertaking. and that he urged Mr. Nultall to allow the hand to come up, providing it would not interfere with their regular school work. He wished me to tell jou that the ( handier of Coinerco the esM'cially, appreciates splendid eooperation that the towns have cities outside and alwajs given to Salt, Luke Citv, and unless the school work is such that a trip to Logan will interfere with their lie felt reasonably studies, sure that Mr. Nuttall and the Salt Iaike City board of would permit the baud to come bp. Yours very truly, A. G. Olofson. Herald-J- SUSPENSION NOT TO INTERFERE HERE j Suspending federal highway construction work in Utah under orders received at U. S. Bureau headquarters in Ogden Monday, is not expected to delay construction vvork on the next unit of the pan canyon road, now under tract to Olof Nelson, Logan con- - tractor This was the consensus of opin-tur- ,on locally following the nnnounce-min- d raent of delay in pending proi-sliocots, made in Ogden Monday by Finck, district engineer Mr Nelson won the contract Next Thursday at midnight will come a pew American celebration. ,,n the next unit of road work to ' Brew Years Eve"ii the canyon last fall and has liner becomes legal at one minute already done preliminary w'ork, midnight on April 7, as the chiding construction of ubuttmvnts scW year begins one minute after for the two bridges in the next midnight on December 31. Ho- - unit The piojctts to lie held up. tela and restaurants will be ready it is understood, are those which tor Brew Year's Eve" cclebru- - are not lit undei contract. The order may, however, delay oiling activities planned on the lower canvon road this summer. It Is understood that the order An .American owner, Mrs. F. was issued pending coordination with work thnt present Ambrose Clark, wins this year's of Roosevelt. grand national steeplechase at planned by presidentrenewed and with betting If this is the case, fCintrec, England, additional activities may possibly u'.uinsl her horse 25 to 1. all summer before the for looked be on ."All kinds of geese bet is over, in the opinion of local people. F. .1. e ct edu-eati- FOR NEW DEAL PRESTON With their war cry. PRESTON Fifty local menof "Let's have a new deal as working under tiie direction a local city officials started pressed by the chairman. Dr. Milo commendable project on the city a. Wheeler, a large group of Uon The group block Monday people nominated a complete of city ticket at an enthusiastic, mect-Cliiworking under the direction of Police Davis and Street jng at tpe Chamber of Commerce Monday evening Supervisor Leo J. Peterson are side of The contest for the mayorality parking the entire south work of nomination The block. featured the nictsDiig school the the first day consisted of removing- with Andrew Nash defeating Jo- a narrow margin unsightly tree stumps and grad- - eph Luthy by ' 1 to 139. ing the soil adjoining the pave- of 20 votes. ill were as follows: Other results In additioa the citv board of City council -- I irst precinct, C. L. education and the L. D S church Jenkins wr n over Berg J. Meeks; board of education are cooperating eppond precinct, Emil Pcttcrborg in the purchase of $75 worth oflwon over J. FI Hall and Charles A. Nuffer; third hard wood trees. C1prpa7c7.' ' U In front of the seminary build- - Crocxe .' of education fourth precinct, Joseph. Luthy. fug the church board dolhundred several uminimous is spending sprinkCitv clerk, George E. Crockett lars on a first class water will P11 over Fred Hobbs and VV. R Smith; ling system and they buildCity treasurer. George E Burgi grass .around the seminary over W. K. Barton. this spring. ing Named as an executive com' nnttce for the new party were M Clifford warr, n u. Evans, J. EW AUXILIARY Ilford Smith, Ray' N. Larsen. Bright, S. P. Packer ex-th- Pres-eclto- . I UNIT IS FORMED unit of the American Legion at Auxiliary was organised according to an- v n Asm H mniDcement today of Mrs of Smitbfield f;,jeson pnniitteewomari. were: Mrs. Olner L)fficers chosen Mrs Margaret Myers, present; -Harris, first Mrs. Martha Murray, chaplain; Mrs Geneva Haelam, historian; at arms sergeant Huin; A Welis-Su.ida- pressed market. LIFE TEKM IS PENALT- YA truck approached, Prent NEW YORK Interest was at a low ebb on the stock exchange todav Volume of transactions was at the lightest level of the year after a slight pickup in early trading " driven by two men no less determined thin the blockading farmers. There was a challenge, words, shots. Cochran was several among "strikl.ig formers who were slightly wounded. But the driver of the truck, R D. Marked, suffered wounds of which he later died. Cochran was arrest's!, locked in a cell, charged with murder, Now an additional count has been ns an him charged naming sory to the crime. Even if th" state cannot prove th it shots from Co hrna's gun lulled Murkoll, Cochran would .be subject to the same penul'y if provd an ucces- scry. South Dakota law makes1 that penalty imprisonment for life. A special jury venire oi 25 had t. be summoned, and there was dilfu-ultin getting a jury. Most of the veniremen were farmers. A qui"t, orderly crowd attend'! each sevMon, paying the closest attention to all the proceedings. But as the trial now going on is a sequel to the violent scene on the road outside Sioux City last February so that violent scene v.i,. Itself thi' se.pu.l iif annUicr stoiy, the story of how Cochran happened to be out on the road that afternoon with a gun in his WASHINGTON, Cochran his bought paying $20,(88). Oil i he put a $10 0(8) mortgage at 5"'i per cent. At $.575 interest, plus fXtti totaled $745. charges "Until two years ago." Cochran tays, we did pretty well. Wo niude enough money to pay out each year and have a little left over In the lat two years, ' though, ail the money we were able to make on that farm wasn't enough to- pav our taxes and in-- 1 Iciest Last year the sturf I sold off that farm didnt bring me mu.h more than $300, though worked like a dog ' "I used to get 75 cents a bushel foi my corn, now I get 10 cents. I to get $S to $10 a hundred- for my hogs, now I get I've got seven cows, and $2 50. PREPtON Funeral services were held Monday at Clifton ward chapel for Mrs. Elizabeth Hen- deison Williams. 62. She died Saturday Yellowing 8 severe attack of influenza Mrs. Williams was born at Clifton, iluho, November 20, 187(1, the daughter of Martin H. V illiums. cr am Elizabeth Bake Williams, Hhe married Loren Williams in VVJ ,ln,- they have lived the major part of their lives In Clifton. She clicf Society was Ull aaive Years and worker for forty-fou- r has as0 WOrkcd in tlie Mutual of the association iniprovcment p t; church, She is survived by her husband and the following children: James h 8nJ, Lu,u Nson; Uora ChU; Kenneth and Beatrhc; and the and sisters. L brothers Milton Henderson. Salt Lake City; a,u Dora Anderson of Pocatello, Idaho in for Jonathan Campbell, who died early Monday morning, will be held Thursday at 2 p m. in the Logan Eighth ward chapel. The body may be viewed at the Rmhards-oodland Mortuary from ed.iesday noon until Thursday noon and at the Eighth ward ' chapel from 1 p. m until the services begin " 1.19 IN PIONEER WOMAN WAR ZONE ASSURED PEIPING, China. Mar. 28 il'.li protection of Americans throughout the. area of Japanese-CliincH- e hostilities was pledged today by Japanese diplomatic authorities ufter the United States minister protested the airplane bombing of an American mission near here. j Niue Chinese were killed in yesterday's bombing, though they wero umlcr tho protection of th'e Aln.rim flafr. Despite the promise of protec- lion, the Japanese pointed out that Americans had been advised to b'avc the danger zone in north China near the Great Wall sepa- - rat,ng China proper from Man- - churin. Many American missionaries are on duty in that section. 120-ac- rc HYRUM MAN (iFTS cougresionnl district, began hia speech on the farm relief bill with this story. "After hearing all the debates on the bill under consideration 1 feel like the two chuplams w ho were lost in the Argonne. They were The heavy shells lost at night. were coming over and airplanes were flying above them dropping bombs. They hud gotten lost from their regular military organizawere tions. They wandering uround in the mud and water of the shell holes, when they heard a Who voice from a trench saying in hell led that ace?" The chap-luin- s got up and embraced each other and said. Thank goodness, we arc among Christians. ". Nielsen of r yrm 88amst.tpe 1 ,iih 1 ro,Jurs soeiation were settled2 cent basis in a hear. Claims of Dewey H ' 1 F'for? ItT adjuster c,'nl"llss'0'1' m"fnin$ u'd the in mhed at Page 2) Lon c Tuusday iniurcl while work-weig- ht compro-(Continu- ed M,;lcn(M August, i" t,he, L .d,sabllty allowancc was for the ohck . ' I,vev,rs"n'1 $400. injury Fourteen Bands Register For Logan State Contest Fourteen bands and five orches-- 1 have registered at the Utah State Agricultural college for the band contest to be held there nized state contest, with authority from the National School Band and Orchestra Contests aasocia- tion. Professor A. R. McCallister is president of this organization The winner of the Logan contest may enter the national contest wnich will be held in Chicago Only thobe organizations which participate in the Logan meet will be eligible for this contest. An additional number of bands and orchestras are expected to enroll during this week. Arrangements to house the visitors during their stay here are being made at the present time, according to on April 20, 21 and 22, according to N. W. Christiansen, chairman of the contest. Eleven hundred mu-- 1 sielans are in these organizations. The bands and orchestras wh'jh have enrolled to date are: North Summit, Park City, Boxelder (two), Helper, Logan Senior and Junior high schools, Monroe, Carbon, Notre Dame, South Cache, Morgan, Bear River and North Cache. Orchestras; North Summit, Boxelder, I ogan, Monroe and South Cache. The local contest is the rocog- - Pro'essor Christiansen i ,dj S .52 8 .53 .r r .81 8 .53 5 .u 1 u i ..i 2 .52 8 .54 7-- 8 i .511-- 4 3-- 8 iBDERED Fire WELLRVICLE Funeral services will be held here Wednesday at 2 p. m. in the Wellsvillc tabernacle for .Joseph Barnes Woodward, one of the oldest pipneer residents of Wellsvillc Mr. Woodward came to Wells-viil- e as a child in the spring of 1857 and had since mado this bis home until his death late Saturday of heart trouble. He was 82 years old. Born in Plum Hollow, Pottowat-tami- e county, Iowa, near Council Bluffs, on July 23, 1850, he was the son of Joseph and Margaret Barnes themselves Woodword, among the first to join the church in England and come to the United States. They migrated to this country in Started To Is Hide Fiendish Crime Mar 28 (l'i9 the belief today Freda M Gibson, 70- that ear-ol- d widow, was tortured before being Denton to death in the kitchen of her home during the SALT LAKE, Police expicssed Mrs. night. The body was found when Bremen responded to an alarm turned in by neighbors Evidence that two fires had been started, prob- nbly ty the intruders, was uncovered, police said. Mrs. Gibson lived alone In a huge two story f runic structure. She used only the kitchen and dining room. Rumors were current throughout the neighborhood that she had a large sum of money hidden in the home. The house had been ransacked. Four men were arrested during the day and held at the city jail for questioning. They were Nick Pesely, 22, Jeff Smith, 22, Wallace Higero n. 19, and Peter Hayes, 19. Mrs. Gibson had lived in Salt Lake City about 13 years. Pro a she had conducted viously boarding house in Park City. FIFTEEN DIE ENGLISH IN Celebrate! Forty-fou- r B. Mitton PLANE CRASH years ago today lod to the altar Miss Mary Huwklns. The devoted couple has resided in Cache valley throughout the intervening period. A host of friends extend congratulations ' and best wishes. K. BROODERS CAUSE THREE FIRES HERE Threo roof fires and one In which a chicken coop and 400 baby chicks were destroyed, have fire departkept the Logun-Cacment busy since Sunday. The most serious was the chicken coop blaze at the home of E. S. Roundy In Benson ward at 9:40 p. m. Sunday. Fire from a brooder set fire to the coop, killing th baby chicks with an estimated lois of $18(8), partially covered by insurance, Monday, at 12:30 p. m., the department wus called to the home of Joe MeMurrin, 179 South Third West, where sparks from the chimney did damage of $15, covered by insurance. Tuesday, at 10:08 a. m., the department was called to a Hyrum home owned by Mrs. Pennctle Williams and occupied by H. A. Kcllet, where sparks from the chimney had caused a roof fire with damage of $100, covered by insurance. At 12:37 today, the department made a short run to tin Nish home, 183 Vf.st Sixth South,' where a roof fire did only minor damage. A tour year old boy was tho only person home at the time the tail v as put in, neighbors having reported the fire SENATE PASSES DIXMUDE, Belgium, Mar. Sx The Britibh Imperial Airways pussengcr plane. City of Liverpool, with 15 persona aboard, era. lied in flumes today at Essen. Police, after an hour's effort recovered five bodies. It was assumed ' the remaining ten kerc tl 19 dead. An eye witness' to the diskslcr saw bodies fulling from the naming plane before it crashed, indicating they had jumped. Some bodies were found 300 feet The victims comprised one Belgium, three Germans and eleven Englishmen. Twelve of the dead we if passengers and the other three were members of the crew. from the wreckage. HEALTH DAY TO BE, BIG CELEBRATION SMITHFIELD Wheels have been set m motion to make the annual Hmithfield Health day, set for Thursday, May 4, as the largest in the history of, celebration Srnithfield. The following officers are in charge: Mayor Richard Roskellry. chairman; F. L. Allen, vice prcsi- dent; G. A. Hurrcn, second vice president; Lowell T. Plowman, secretary and treasurer; Leonard Olson, chairman of finance; M T. Van Ordcn, parade; Dr. T. W, :J Jarvis, program; Nathan Mather, , advertising. Each these chairmen ot have under working them on various phases of the days undertaking and expect to make the celebration entertaining as well as extremely worthwhih 1840. The family came to Utah in the of 1852 and settled in CrantSvilie, Tooele county. In the spring of 1857, Y the family came to Wellwille. hen 18 years of age, Mr Woodward began freight-- j ing on tho Montana road between Corinnc, Helena and Butte. He was on the road at the time of the Ncz Perce Indian trouble but escaped where many others were killid. He was a freighter for 11 years after winch he began farming in Wellsvillc. He was active in public and church affairs, having acted as con.stablo. city marshal and city councihnun in Wellsvillc. He filled two missions, one in the southern states in 1X95 and the other in England in 1912. He married Mary Alice Baugh, December 18, 1876, and she with seven of ten children born to the couple survives. The children are: John and Hyrum Woodward, Wellsvillc; Mrs. Mary Thorpe, Logan; Mrs Margaret Leishman, Vale, Oregon; Alonzo, Garland and Ernest Woodward, Baker City, One Oregon. brother, Hyrum Woodward of Cardston, Canada, 25 grandchildi en and 10 also survive. FOREST MEASURE spring COMPENSATION - PASSESAWAY -- Complete tras Campbell Services To Be Held Thursday 28 PROTECTION 1923. On Mar. The American Cotton Cooperative BY UNITED PRESS tssociution today threw its support behind the administrations Attacks on Jews were reported to senate the and faimbill urged in Germany today, but the Nazi empower President Roosevelt to party organization, postponed a new a "American agriculture give repressive campaign of retaliadeal." tion in the hope that "atrocity V. Benton Blalock, president of propaganda" abroad would halt. before the association, appea-o- d More than 1,000,000 Jews and thcl agricultural committee and Gentiles gathered at mass meetpleaded for a general agricultural ing throughout the United States "flexible enough to handle last night to hear Christian and i bill all basic commodities. Jewish leaders denounce Blalock's testimony was the first chain of opposibreak in a long Allred E Smith, one of the tion testimony before the commitspeakers ut a New York meeting, tee. pleaded against religious bigotry Earlier In the day, F. E. Mollin, and declared "theie is no differfor the Denver, Colo., speaking ence between a brown shirt and National Live.sto.ck association, had a night shirt " abandon uiged that Congress In Moscow, the Soviet govern"artificial price stimulutio.,1 as an ment unoffuialiy protested ata;d t0 the farmer. tacks on Soviet citizens. I'uiMri',, farm IS LAID TO REST Funeral services y, ARE DENOUNCED STDKI CLIFTON WOMAN REGUN IN PRESTON TO food. A PARKING PROJECT a general agree- lu-- FARM BILL been for neighbors. They have helped with the chores and They have been glud to do it, for Nile Cochran is the farmer to them "The who reprcseits Cause." He is Qne ef the-- . 75 farmers who took part in the affray on the picket lines outside Sioux City, across the border in South Dakota, which drew first blood in the blockade intended to prevent milk from entering Sioux City for sale in an overcrowded and de2 Die-har- d ts COTTON MEN GIVE Will the new beer be sold in any . merits of the administrations farm plan: Theres nothing mandatory in it Everything is optional And whenever the government finds Pself getting its f infers burnt it can any ordinary jump and run. Under measure it would have to hold on tight until congus-- repealed or amended the net. 1 Herald-Journa- l: S. Brown, how-eve- minutes earlier. .When Burbaru did not return. Mrs. Wildes went to the bd.emcnt. She raw the sack and examined it, then ran to the street screaming. 1 the child had ELK POINT, S. D., Maich 28 beenhysicians saidassaulted. The criminally L P' A climax to last winrers Harold W ildcs. was not at milk r trike is bong played here father, n.s Nile Cochran, Iowa home when the crime ooeuned The portly colored man who u ts lalincr. fights to save hiniisclf for Secas dooiti'ndcr-me.x.scnge- r fioiu spending the rest of his - lfe i retary of Labor Frames Perkins prison believes hiimelf well quulified to Before him in the courtroom "do foi " the first woman of the .sit hi.s wife, his six sons, the oldcabinet. er- ir, and his little daughter. "I was a private family man for They have been trying to carry on 12 years, he says. "And I know the farm work since that day last AID mi nth when Cochran whs ai rested and put in a cell of the county jail at Sioux City, fa.' But they cculdn't have done it if it hadn't ATTACKS ON JEWS Replies To Mr. Matsuoka talked earnestly and thought the American fleet should be moved from the Pacific, back to the Atlantic. That is not reasonable. Japan's territory borders on the We do not ask her to Pacific. take her ships out of the Pacific. Our land borders on the Pacific, nuorc of it than all territory pos-- 1 sessed by Japan, and we may, adopting Mr. Matsuoka's expression, remark that the United States is - not a" vassal of Japan, and therefore can keep her ships on its' east or west coast, as preferred. There, is no faintest spark of hostility toward Japan in this country, now that labor competition has practically ceased. Only some "inferiority complex" could make either nation suspect hostility in the other. tn their affliction, and to keep himself. unspotted from the world" j But rn civilized 1933, you might believe that the most important part of the whole duty of man is to drink beer. discuss newspapers Solemnly, the day on which beer drinking may begin. Fear is expressed that in New York a misunderstanding of, the legislature may delay beer's by a whole week. W hat a a Father Of Seven Faces,, Imprisonment For Life; Avhat is the whole duty of man in America? According to the Bible it is to visit the fatherless, and widows t ld detectives One young Chinese named Lin Nap Nut, in the crowd waiting for Mr. Matsuoka, looked, police aaid, as though he bad some opinHe had a ions about Manchuria loaded revolver, for which he had Ml YORK, Mur 28 1 l- '- A beaten gir! was found in a burlap bug of a today in tl' ' busement Diooklyn tenement luuse. Physicians worxed over the dying child but were unable to her as she was pronounced dead at 1 2 ' 15 r. m sped Meanwhile, through the district where live children against major crimes have occurred within two ycais The assailant:! had knotted a rope tightly around the neck rd the victim, Barbara Wildes The childs mother,, Mrs. Anna Wildes, had sent Barbara to the busement ally have rem foi hor brother s oaby carriage 15 ment on the NEW bruised and the wav they is. Sooas I heard about her coming in here I just went and put away ull those big brass cuspidors out of sight. I didnt wait for any orders from the chief clerk I knew." i Sack them" armed in New York Friday and polite, smiling, reminded us that J.ipun is "not a vassal state of America," and net d not Justify her actions in Munthuna 01 elsew here. Of that the United States is aware. We approved when Eng- land and Frame took all Ger- many's colonies. Why ro.ir when Japan nibbles off a piece of China? It Is not. after at 1, our business, which is to look after our solid corner of the woild on this North American continent phis islands in various places, the 1hillppines, Guam, etc , and the big empire of Alaska That id Enough for any countiy T SALT LAKE Perhaps government buildings? not - but how about the senate house restaurants and the and ccutie offnc various cafeterias in other large deConic on, jou fellows" government buildings? Cdfcgrcss manded the pi evident with a large wont so high, wide and handsome me something to do. in laugh Give divesting the beverage of all reWhat do I keep jou for?" strictions that sonic new regulations. probably will be necessary if The grinning, meigetlc presi- it is to be barred In such places. dent drew the biggest laugh thus drys tried to get a provii, far in his administration, on any A sion barring beers sale ut a press conference property into the bill newspaperman asked him if this government legalizing 3 2 beer for the District country was going to Join "Musso- ot failed. Mem- -' Columbia. lini's club" Roosevelt didn't quite bers of congressThey made It quickly understand and the coi respondent weren't that plain going they Britiexplained that the proposed around with their tongues hang-- i shpeace of out millions while their ing sgi cement was being commonly constituents slaked au ancient culled a "dub demanded Roosevelt, thirst. Well." "what are the dues?" Congressman Dirksen, who Abraham Lincolns old The experts ou Uic.i'lOdc lines fin- Burlap n Japans delegation in tile League f Nations, and "walked out on (t Sept. High Low Close Open .51 PRICE FIVE CENTS Japan's Business, .ot The Whole Duty Of Man. luiy .. .. ! Of Iowa s Milk Strike lyu) (Copyright, Grain Range VLJLii. M A R C II U E S D A Y, Arthur ISrishane R.v tr n FAVOR EMBARGO WASHINGTON, D. C. March 28 Minus its recruiting details, reforestation unemployment roliof bill was today passed by the senate. The measure as passed broad gives President Roosevelt powers to develop .project as he Biay desire. The house will consider the measure tomorrow. A companion unemployment relief project, tho Wagner million dollar plan direct relief grants to states, received approval of the senate bunking und currency committee. In approving the Vtag.ier bill, the committee Included a restriction that not more than 15 per cent of the new funds may be gi anted to any one state. Leader Byrnes said the Whit" House had accepted tho Senate version of the reforestation bill whih gives the president power to fix the rate of pay for volunteer workers in rcioieatalion und other projects. (tl.FP the Srnithfield Mans Car Found In Ogden Chief of Police G. A. Mecham lute notified Eugene Monday ON Lundqmst of Srnithfield of his car being held by, Ogden police after being abandoned there. WASHINGTON, Mar. 28 d.Pl Logan police were notified by An arms embargo granting the Ogden authorities of the matter president authority to bar ship- Monday mjrning. ment of munitions and war maMr. Lundquist said the car had terials to any nation was today been stolen while he was in Salt He exfavorably reported by the house Lake over the week-enforeign affairs committee. pects to roduiin the ear tody MUNITIONS James Bullock, presthe local Chamber of PRESTON ident of Commerce announces the club is entertaining the Weston Chandler of Commerce Wednesday night, March 29, at 8 p. m. m the local club rooms. The evening's entertainment wilt consist of community singing di- reeled by ltoincc Bn ugh; an address of welcome by President Bullock; selections from tho Wes- male chorus und an address by C. H Carlson. J. J. Fiula will furnish a dame orchestra for a dam mg party to be given following the meeting , ton IlappiL Lea der T I JI lones, collector in the uty water department and 'xTv first counselor in A i the Third ward tV W !nY& - bishopric, day age. t,on"! 58 is to- - 7 years of H Congratula- - j-- ff .Mtu'' hi 9" Si i - tv A |