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Show s The H 7r mu lb' ' tonight and Wtd little change in tempuu- - ..u-fair neW' Number 21. Volume 2G8. asnington and More Mbon of Hound VV Pl violators present system of local Boards is to be Compliance I nder tothe new implilied. be an- soon oif pinery a federal offieer njunoe,; will be n each community to super-apeuallj designated The code enforcement. Compliance Boards mil act as instigation agents. Commercial Guilds Get Legislative Powers The The code violator rating closer hauing of into court is PROTECTION i hot, secret battle is raging in council of the Agricultutin inner ral department over consumer CONSlMB.il siotedion Frederick C Howe, liberal Counsel, is demand-i- g jusumers that a provision be inserted in code j master food industries grades and stand-ad- s sing specified J for all cm sumers goods a Dole, brother of the pineapple and chief of the Food Section, is opposed Secand the Brain tary Wallace fruiters lineup with Howe. Dole contends the canners and d manufacturers will not a code containing such a Jause Howe says t is not a irition of what they v ill accept, nit what is in the best mter-s- t of the public inner Products C u tie County voted dry in the recent election by almost 2 to one according to the official count made public today bv County Clerk Carl V Mohr Appaiently the vjters were mote ntcie&tcd in the national a lie id ment than in the state amendme it since there were 611 s votes is' m the state amendment than in thi national The official count showed that 337 Carhe county residents desired the repeal of the loth amend ment while 0143 desired the r ten For the tion of the amendment abandonment of the st etc dry law 2163 people v 'ted yes and 398., voted no ' Three pre inets only hud a majoi-itCornish wet voles namely Cache Junction and Logan District 3 An earlier report th it Trenton had gone wet" was due to a transposition of the figures, the dry vote getting into the wet" column and vice versa Two precincts were tied, Peters-borNo 1 and Login District 2 The official figures for the respective preeincts aie as follows Prohibition Amendments Istate National -- ON I HE WOT is on the spot Jim Farley Big Holy Jim Nl New York the hox Kces defeat in mayoralty race Jims sadly impaired reputation as a political manipulator. Of course, if McKee hail won, Jim would he act hum receiving strategist. as a wily did not win, and Presidents advisers, ho opposed Farleys meddling in he New York situation, are urg-i- g that a curb be put on his lolitical Alterations. According to hem Jim has been doing Satie uiet intriguing in California .md nsronsin and they want him ailed off on the ground that if le is not he will pile up a lot ot needless trouble for the President among the with Progressives, horn Farley has never been McKee ertam of the But opular -- ONE INTERPRETATION Mr Secretary," a PrtESS UNITED Ilal. ROME. Not. 11 Prcmiei Eunlo Mussolini, abolishing at one stioke the ancient Italian parliaments) y system, today announced dissolution ol the Chamber of Deputies, and the turning ovet of national leg-- , tslatne powers to a system of trade and commercial guilds The guilds, through then central council and embracing industry, labor and comwill leplacc the merce, chambei in a new coopoa-tn- e state involved by y o -- FORI) AGENTS Ford may be anathema Roosevelt administration Henry the bis are ertamhi SCOUT diffused through the Adjustment Admims-atio- n Ticultural 15 PRICE FIVE CENTS. 3. BACK FROM SCHOOL prominent among Ford's Major C W. Dunning, Director of Processing and m acting the and AAA, Carlson chief of licensing Enforcement ten years was Carlson nt in Vienna Dunning "? w The school and conference were attended by scout executives from Utah, Arizona, California and Nevada According to Mr Pond the conference covered much needed material in the advancing of scouting during the year, stressing particularly the 10 year program Accomplishments of the first year were reviewed and foundations laid for future objectives Each council was asked to make a survey of the present stdus and then set objectives d so that the program may be bv 1942. The principal objective of this program is to have one out of every four new male at that time having had four years of scouting Recruiting and the holding of the boys through scouting activities were principal items discussed at the conference F Charles Sneakers included Smith of Columbiq chairman of the committee, rubbing of Thomas Keen chairman of the Sea scout committee, and H F Pote, director of the personnel J, SEVERE STORM Rogers 42y$. rj'ni'i nil, US ,1"1 8n l'v 'i Cal Nov lotion -- ii , ( h 1 . , , . oui s. Hi av uniico STATE SECRETARY the Independent grocers of to Logan and Cache county of are Commeet at the Chamber merce, November 20 Donald Re-P Lloyd, secretary of the Utah tailers Association, is calling thea meeting Mr Lloyd wall arrangethe good program, and desires all be to grocerymen independent present been has Robert Sheffield elected as the Cache county representative of the independent grocers on the state food counsel provided for in the state code for the retail trade All non-buyi- mess Hales, resident Ceorge to the Logineer for thf addition took active federal building, gan work charge of the construction today He will repiesent the government in checking on the building work during course of O PRESS SIOUX CITY, Iowa, Nov. 14 National Farm Holiday association leaders from five states returned to their homes with renewed determination to continue the farm strike until cost of production Is reached The decision was reached at a conference of leaders from NeSouth braska, Iowa, Minnesota, Dakota and Wisconsin with Milo Reno, national president of the Farmers Holiday association The leaders reported to Reno that the flow of farm products to market had been materially re duced as a result of the nonselling, embargo declared October 21 by the association m the midwest by Speeches General Hugh Johnson, NRA administrator, and Henry Wallace, secretary of agriculture, will have no cited on the holiday movement, Reno told the group The strike was called to raise prices on farm products to cost of piocmction, and neither has shown how this could he accomplished the under present government program, Reno said MILLIONS NEEDED Hales Is Engineer For New Building en- 4 (.OV, BLOOD II AMP Logan Contractors Low Bidders On Excavation For College Building Rian Rally For Football Rotarians will meet to8 o'clock in the senior chool room in the rear of Logan night at high Nibley hall The meeting is m preparation for the big football pep rally to be conducted at the Hotel Ben Lomond in Ogden under the Wednesday evening of the Rotary auspices t Ogden TO FIGHT HUNGER BY 3V UNITED PRESS NEW YORK A decline in utilinity shares had an unsettling this fluence on the stock market afternoon, after an early rally that embraced all groups Trading quieted down when the utilities cased and pressure was resisted in tne mam list 1A WASHINGTON, Nov 14 boost in the government's domestic buying price for gold to $3356 an ounce .sent the gold value of the American dollar today to the lowest m 68 years m the The further increase domestic price was interpreted as another indication that President Roosevelt was determined to carry his dollar depreciation-pnc- e lifting plan to the limit With the 11 cent boost todav at 6159 the dollar was valued cents in gold This was the lowest level it has reached since March, 1865. when the Civil war greenback inflation sent the dollar to 57 50 cents UNITED NEW PRESS YORK CITY. Nov state and local governments are at grips with a gigan- tic problem of providing unemployment relief for the fifth winter of the depression and are striving desperately to meet an estimated need of more than $500,-000,0- United Press survey of the nation showed today that the federal government, in addition to state and local efforts, is carrying the main relief burden running into hundreds of millions of dollars for the winter alone Some states have relief well organized Many others, however, have only brief periods of relief aoxured Others have totally inadequate funds or none whatever Included in a survey of conditions in various states is the following Utah Relief estimates for November and December, $980,000. obtained from state sales tax and federal and county funds A NABS BARTENDER PRESTON Sheriff W D Head arrested Hyte Bounce, bartender of the Dunford and Cronquist Beer Parlor of Franklin, for Illegal of The arrest liquor. possession occurred Saturday night after the said offender had been spiking" beer drinks for the purpose of increasing the possible intoxicating ' ground breaking exercises for the newest building addition to the Utah State Agricultural college campus were being held in Logan this afternoon, contract was being left In Salt Lake City for excavation woik for the new $325,000 home economics and student commons building With only two bids submitted, the local firm of John Moser and L. S. Hill was low bidder on the excavation work, according to word received from the office of the I tah state building coinmls- sion. Their bid was approximately $5700 as compared with a bid of approximately $6400 by the W hitmeyer company of Ogden. Governor Henry H. Blood was to be the speaker at the While Rotarians o - o RUSSIAN CONFAB PT UNITED T Mo. Nov H KANSAS Residents of a dozen middlew extern states rubbed dust from their eyes and counted a toll of a raging autumn gnle that brought death, accidents, large piopcrty damage and discomfort Fouiteen deaths were attributed to the g'orm and four persons were missing, believed di owned The blast shrieked down from the north across the prairie states, heralding the appioa.h of winter From sunrise Sunday until long after sunset, the winds lashed with hurricane force, the velocity rang-fro35 to 50 miles an hour mg UNI i ru runs WASHINGTON, Nov. eano sugior refiners today launched an attack on the plan under consideration by the farm administration to levy compensating taxes on cane and beet sugar end syrup, based on their competition with corn products which are subject to the corn process- BY two-side- d' CITYT, 'Pprovod leav of nations . ' feHow voted kimuV " Irao" ,'! 'hey are on his 1',. ol league thi fell 'ount of her iVln,,'' n I' I" men, nobody r 11 MV n,U( h k'ltiop ftf 1M s11' t0 be llvlnf? m nil (raJ " ""od ideas don t ct ov ,r,'body 18 out to protect "th1 Th" arc! i l1hc' ln a f',ru-pending on the tpfro " llt:Rle cm out much Look J Switzerland, sluny, heir nuV'?1 minding Mntss 4 th,m Nw they a Thi' ",2 ?ut byng 01 id has just lost a ib " " h of ls hai Ruys wltb Y th ' STRIKES MID-WES- - TO PUSH STRIKE FRANKLIN COUNTY OFFICE ARRANGED GROCERS TO MEET 111 S- FARMERS LETTER W hen assistant high Arrangements were being made ruined Ford's Austrian today by Postmaster Eugene Yeates both men got out diMajor of 0lg was a great Hoover foi the opening local a deadletter He postoffice Twent to the Republican vision in the ic acting nndr instructions from as a the Chicago WUjn postoffice department delegate . first Jr Roosevelt s election he got According to Mr Yeates, allUnited rlass postof ficcs in the der the New Deal, hired as his subordinate, States on December 1. will open a chief Cailson dead letter division, handling " 9 mail whicn heretofore tk Ell i ESTIGATION hag been forwarded to a central tacto s of southern power dead letter office In Washington, D C Continue! on page five) Tro PRL club The Provo and the Logan Rotary clubs will be guests of the Each Ogden club at the rally club will sing the songs of its school and give the reasons for the outcome of next Saturdays football game between the B Y U negotiations It also pointed out .that he had and the USAC at the Aggie no definite appointment with the stadium. The Logan club is preparung President today. to put over some interesting stunts at the Ogden meeting. For tnat reason all Rotarians are VOTE . urged to be in attendance. com-olete- is is ness, WILL UNI The WASHINGTON, Nov 14 federal emergency relief organizaextended a helping tion today hand to hundreds of thousands of anu women unemployed girls throughout the nation The atta. k on unemployment among women was 1 The establishment of a resident school where girls and women will receive food, shelter, and clothing while learning new trades or professions 2 The creation of thousands of jobs in federal, state and municifinanced from pal institutions, Uie $400,01)0,000 recently allotted to the civil works administration by the public works organization. Heretofore, little has been done to relieve conditions among unemployed women. uniti D pwy ss 14 -- The Nov WASHINGTON, White House has every hope that tin negotiations between President Roosevelt and Maxim Litvinov, Soviet foreign commissar, will be successfully concluded by Friday At the White House today, in addition to this expression of confidence as to the ultimate outcome, it was stated that the were negotiations progressing gradually and favorably. Askeu whether recognition of the Soviet union definitely would come by Friday, Stephen Eaily, President Roosevelt's secretary, declined to amplify the previous statement which indicated an early settlement At the same time, it was pointed out that the doors of the White House were open to at all times in the Litvinov last week from the Region 12 Scout Executive Training conference held at the Mertmar hotel in Sdnta Monica, California DEAD BY ay Si out Executive Preston Pond of the Cut he Valley Council returned are yPety Expects Huge Sam From Tax TO END FRIDAY Most TlJ 19 14. Farm Administration EXECUTIVE cit-ire- reporter Henry Wallace, what do ou think of the Farmers Hobby movement' ell it might be compaied to he nerve m dn aching tooth. sKed Si MEEK tc-- BY ac-e- ,( o V E Merry-- w General Hugh quietly working on a is, Dr 0 ' utSHINGTON -- N DREW PEARSON ROBERT S. ALLEN Bv and 0nit T U E S D A V. UTAH. LOGAN, Jouima & I PARENTS COUNCIL Parent-Teache- FOR COLLEGE To mothers of (hildttn of hU secs rrom one week to six years, the Utah Stafc Agrn ultural colli gc agricultural show to lie helu November 36- - 17 and 38 will offer s special feature The infant nut i ition class of the school of home economics is preparing a carefully planned display featuring childhood diets. The nutrition booth will show a days dietary for infants from one day to nine months of uge For childten from 9 to 18 months the second display will demonstrate the evolution of a liquid to a solid media known as the trausition diet " The third display section will illustrate the nursery or diet. This will include many attractive airangements of food planed to stimulate the imaginative interest of the young child Placcards and charts will clear ly explain the bans for scientific feeding of infants Mrs, E M Stock is chairman of th i display Parents Day By Alma Lee MeCowin The annual Parents' Day at the Woodruff school is set t ir Thursday, November 16. "Parents will be received by the Citizenship committees duilng the day from 8.45 on Registration and visiting of children in their classes will go on all day until the close of school at 4 '00 oclock, after which teachers will be able to meet parents and discuss probwith the ground breaking ceremony lems in connection work of their children. with F. P this afternoon Champ, chairman of the buildThursday Is Home Room CitiAt 11 25 zenship meeting day ing committee of the college board of trustees and a mem- - , home room meetings will be held m every room above the second her of the state commmittee on public works, acting as grade Parents will have the opchairman portunity of seeing the citizenship J W. Halloran of Salt Lake program functioning in the various rooms City, president of the Utah At 7:30 the monthly P. T. A. State building commission, will turn the f.rst ahuVul of earth. program Will bu held. Paieuts aie Mr Moser and Mr, Hill were urged to observe dtumg the day both in Salt Lake today and and have problems ready to discuss at the meeting at night. A could not be reached for a statement but it is presumed part of the evening program will that they will start a force at be the discussion of school and child pioblems work on the excavation imParents Day affords an oppormediately Bids on actual construction work will likely be tunity for parents and teachers to called for within a short time get together on their problems, and for parents to got acquainted in order that this work maybe started as soon as the exwith the school and its program cavation is completed It is It is hoped that all parents will make it a point to visit at least planned to have the building a part of the day and attend the ready for occupancy by September, 1934 meeting at night was in the MEETS WEDNESDAY placed Franklin county jail sod Monday, November 13 was brought before Probate Judge David G Eumes A meeting of the Cuche who set his bonds at $300 00 and County r assothe case will be tried Thursday, Counit! of ciations his bem lallud for WedNovember IS nesday at 7 30 p m at the court- ,iSET School Sets It content. Bounce NUTRITION SHOW Woodruff house in Logan The mi ettng was called bv Mis T B Farr of Kimthfield, lounty pi evident Offntrs of all local asso-- 1 itions are expected to attend Dr R J Evans of the Utah State disi usx Agi icullural colli ge will (rogiam building at the meeting OF OGDEN OFFICE approved Forest Supervisor Carl B Arent-xo- n, FEDERAL JOB fTf. JURY In-- FIX FIVE GENERATIONS iol-hil- ir PRESENT AT repre-heve- d ar (ontail with i Grihum Jr t dnven by G"ii)e Torge-mnthe rate of r. mi IS (H r tmur at Ihe inter os turn of Suomi East and J?e ot d North Members of the jury wei C L and Lcitoy Foaotk Re wno ti tified at the Tims Tho-he ii mg today wire Jorge son. Joe in Shiphtid, who w.is a Chef e pas-nng- and Aiting James Smith his i re, Roliee HUGE REDUCTION M. route Horslev stopped in Logan to California with Mr and Mrs Billty Theurer, also of Los AnSIIAEK HITS HIGH geles They also left Mondav ac-Silver companied by Mrs John A MontNEW YORK Nov li (I metal hit another new three jedr rose of Logan Mrs Lundahl. at whose home the high today when bar silver was quoted at 45 cents an ounce, an in- I dinner was held is a granddaughter cents from yesterday of Mr Horsley crease of 31 poles were burned when creosote boiled over, starting the fire 1 lt The Cache National forest, during the coming winter, will employ approximately 1150 men on make work projects If present plans are PACKERS John A Monlio-- e great grant-- I mother; then Mrs folio Anderson then Mrs Lurtla 1fUalo Ulv Virrl ill U grandmother, Corson Shipley, raotm r, and fin ally little Myral Jeanne Shipley, baby Mrs Shipley and daughter ac$150 in damage Approximately from was caused bv a fire Monday at companied Merlin Sh'plev the pole yard of George Bell at Salmon, Idaho, on a visit lo the Seventh North street ami Main Ac- home of Mrs Sh'jileys parents DICKS MENACE FARMERS HEREFORD, Tex (1 P- i- Millions cording to Fire Chief C W Rapp, They returned home Mond ly. Mr en of wild ducks with prodigious appetites for giain arc bringing (omplaints from farmers in Deaf Smith county Farmers, fated with grain shortage even before the ducks appeared, have applied to state and federal authorities for permission to shoot the fowl out of season. MEN IN FOREST back from a week-en- d conference with other forest supervisors in Region Four, reported these plans Monday The estimate has gone forward to Washington and confirmation it experted la. t in the week on the work It will be financed through the $400,000,000 civil works fund recently aipropriated from the public works administration Approximately 21,213 men will be used in the forests of Region Four In the Cwho National forest proper, 759 men will be used while an additional 400 men will be used on public lands adjacent to the forests The men are about evenly divided between the Utah and Idaho sections of the forest Where possible the men will hve at home and draw a maximum wage on a tcale of 45 cents iier hour for unskilled labor. However. It m Civilians planned to reopen the Conservation Cnrp camp In tbo left hand fork of Riai ksmith Fork cenvon where "on men working in SMALL that section will be housed It will be impossible to Use the Ijiignii of 'anvin CCC tamp because GET deep snows which make it during most of the winter men will work on various The BY UNITeo RRC6 lamp projeits, continuing the work CHICAGO, Nov 31- - Th" gnu started this summer by the begin today to turn mu to small paikets for pioccYuiig, ih" supply of hogs putrliuid m tin , wi i k m an open market here REFUSES TO effort to relieve n ! uflm K luiwem mid liuvers sellers The at lion ltd to nnimdiite talk MISHAP BLAME among the trade I bat the gover to was out discipline ihe huge pai king companies A mi oners jury, in city imirt The government todav Bllotid tin Tuesday morning reficstd to fix Illinois Meat Paiking company tor n sponsibll tv for thi de.th of John proi easing 1500 of Ihe J'lnoo hog ZihudM, 51 who vi - killid bought on the ha il muk I last y a ud iy Iioi nn g w hi a hit tiv , r ir Jr Saturday cnvi n tiv Gmrg" Im genson. Zebu-dir The jui v ii port said that rmt Ins death by 'coming In I) Allen of Hyruni, deputy of interna! tciuuio for this DINNER section, lias been placed temporarily In marge of the Ogden office, succeeding Waller M Farr, resigned Five gmot itions wue present at Although Mr Allen is at his of- fire in the federal building in Lo- - a family dinner Sunday at the home gun occasionally, he will bo forced of Mr and Mis E W Lundahl of to spend the major portion of his Logan time at the Ogden offue until re-- 1 The oldest gi m ration was .inted by Herbert Horsley of Soda Next was Mrs Springs, Idaho nomurnTo lu MAY EMPLOY MANY' cy ALLEN IN CHARGE A ing tax. In a brief filed with Secretary of Agriculture L A, Wallace, Crosby counsel for twelve large sugar refiners, assented that the i ompensating attack is arbitrary and illegal and that it rests upon uncertain and changung conditions The brief said there is no competition whatever between corn and cane sugar for home consumption It is charged that corn sugar producers, because of much lower costs of their product, seek compensating taxes to avoid increasing prices Farm administration officials according to the brief, propose to collect $8 000,000 in taxes on corn sugar and $60,000,000 in com-- , pensating taxes on cane and beet sugar, all to be used to pay benefits to corn producers. GIVEN CONSUMERS BV UNITED PKtSS SAV FKAXCistOi Nv. U k)Hrirr- Thi Imifjc today had industrial d rtd hv thf coinimMon to reduro its chars for natural fou bj m estimated a jnr. The commission also ordered to funds numcri for th r 16 and pi nod hotwon fid S.liMUtHJ timber !' |