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Show t V PAPE SIT THE JOURNAL1, LOGAN, CACTI flflSfgSfflti COUNTY. UTAH U 1 1 Monday, February 4, 1929. Tllaeatee APE1P(S1L l 1 I Snappy Vaudeville Acts Moisday, February 4th Matinee 330 JL-- Wilford F.Baagh From Trip - . THE THREE To Auto Factory W. F. Baugh, manager of' (die Baugh Motor Company, deaim 'in Nash automobiles, has returned from a two weeks trip In the east, having visited the Nash factory and also attended the big automobile show now being conducted in Chicago. The trip was a pleasant one from many view points A sight seeing tour of Chicago was taken and a visit made to the home of Bobby t, Franks. ie youth murdered by Leopold hpd headLoeb Mormon missionary ' quarters were visited and two Salt Lake missionaries spent a couple of days wtyh Jrfr. Ba.ugh,, They are doing 'afspiehclld !w'pvk( The weather is cold ( in i Chi? ago at the present time and It is not pleasant out doors at all. . At the Nash factory the local dealer followed the raw mateilal irom its .beginning in the factory through yto tbi finished automo- t WORLDS WONDERS Dairy, School: It was Elinor Glyn who discovered It but that elusive characteristic was never fully explained until there came to our shores but recently ahuman being, without name or country, yet possessing "both male and female sex, and must consequently be known as IT. All of which is merely an introduction to vaudeville of perhaps the strangest human on earth, heading The Three Worlds Wonders on the Pantages Bill at the Capitol Wednesday and It is both male and female, Thursday, February 6th and 7th. posqssing not only the physical characteristics, but the traits and'Mndnnefisms of both. The populace at large cannt deny Its" claim to be a real half woman half man, as the exhibit of the body leaves little or nothing to the imagination. Desiring only to be accepted ,A sincere and genuine It will hold a number of receptions immediately following the matinee performances on the mezzaniHe flOof at the Capitol at .which time the .theatregoers bf the city nfay obtain a close View of the physical characteristics. The qthert wo .wonders ar, Walter Leichty, Providence, and II.'M.iCkbmisd Sr. 504 E 1 South, Feb. 6, Gorilla the ape man, ahd'the 11 if Head Twins whose heads are barely larger than an " i ordinary .orange. H $ouri!Actijnake up the1 remainder of the bill. Maxine and Bobbj Cbb' Man and Some Dog open the show. Billy Small follows with his fiddle and some jokes. Pressler and Klaiss Jn VPersonjitiJy'. Plus present a rollicking fifteen minutes -- fia,e a classic ani car value in thd tiMWd'itates.WI ckprifee revue thatif?5ut bf the ordinary. g'l:; day. Mr. Baugh ' catne Siome; so 4 H- 100 percent on Ms cat He satf ColcESttfrm Tiifos - . the outlook for business this year 44 ever has Lives than ho better , In Eurojpe , (and i made arrangements j far p ample tars to take care of yhe demands During : Week End . locally. anticipated k , f i Continued r&m page one ?f - L)ndb?rghrBlazc$trtf. epobs .dcutlis from the cold were , frotn 1 Shanghai ana soHlierfi Chiiiah ; N, , .,r, . A merfeatj Service jjThfe third day of the worst btur-zafr-d Iln twenty-fiv- e years cut ConContinuf'd'froin'P? stantinople completely off from , for a the world by land and sea. persons wax' There were many wrecks In the glimpse of the takeoff, and a3 soviet Lindbergh came out of the han- Black sea. The cattle gar, police were unable to main- steamer Omsk, 2,500 tons sank tain order, the crowd breaking near the Irva Islands, while three across the field. Lindbergh tur- other ships, the Turkish Hissar, ned and held up his hand and the Russian Tolp and the French the crowd halted. Rhone, were all aground. While officers were ItConditions in - There was a Lindbergh waited, self were tragic.Constantinople refusing to bring the plane out serious bread because of the hangar until the field had flour could notshortage be transported. been cleared. The temperature was 8 beiow zero At 5:50 a m, he received his last weather report, showing a centigrade. A number of houses collapsed light rain from Miami south to beneath heavy snow drifts and Keywest. The leather was clear- there were sixteen separate fires ing somewhat to the south of in the past 24 hours. key west. - A score of Dispatches from Siberia said photographers who that Bulgaria also was suffering had braved the early morning from an unprecedented cold wave, rain to get pictures of Colonel the temperature in some sections Lindbergh s departure were 0 degrees below zero red from the field. Officials 0f droPPfng the company said it was Lind centigrade. Messages from Cluj in Transyl-anl- a bergbs request that no pictures of his departure be taken. said that hunger-craze- d Col. wolves driven from their' haunts Havana, Feb. 4 (AP) Charles a Lindbergh hopped off in the snow buried woods and for Belize, British HonduraSr-on-thii- ls, had, invaded-- towns and yil-the second lap of his . Inaugural lages. Entire populations formed airmail flight to Panama, Just ! vigilance committees to driv$ ;off one hour and four minutes after the marauders. his arrival here from Miami. The weather was favorable and Colonels wishes that he was rethe Colonel hoped to reach Belize ceived at the airfield Just as a by .commercial pilot, and Cuban gov- , Ctoibia field at ..ded o.?,e eminent officials who greeted 8.21 o clock this Jhoming, two him were there purely in an ex-1- 3. tak- -j pert official capacity. ater Noble t ing off from Miami. Brandon Judah. United States His arrival here was completely onewas of ambassador, those - at business-lik- e and there was no the field to congratulate him pomp or ceremony such as his wish him many returns of and the landing last year when he stop- day. ped at Havana in the Spirit of St. Louis" on his famous tour of Miss Audrey Bergeson has rethe central American states. moved to the Sorosis It was m compliance with the cently house. I .Trail-Ft- Newfari-j- ) i rep&rfptj 1 i . -- . - Kollegiate Kampus Kaprice At Capitol . f Theatre' Tonight , . (Continued From Page One) and this frolic ,4s the result. fn V. "KelidgiateKacklers, Reality they are a harmonious male quartet with voices and a college line. The VI. Garden Fantasie." Dance club discovered the quaint charm1 of umbrellas and built a number around it. VII. Peg Peg And Frank. Bankhead and Frank Lizt ' in a two reeler of reel humor. Vm. The Stranger Interlude. Three Sorosis girls wrote this clever college farce after the pattern of Eugene ONeills famous play aptly showing how humorous each one of us is. IX. Girls. The Beta girls sing and dance through a show to prove that the weaker sex is stronger. Miss Helen ThompX. Jazz-o- ." son directs this jazz act. The negro melodies are catching and the dances are new, having been introduced in New York just recently by Ann Pennington In George Whites "Scandals XI, Skeleton in .The Closet,! a Mriy show in which Juanita Boyle, Emerson - Abbott and Darrell Crockett entertain, , XII. Japansy ' under Gladys Habbs direction, i this difficulty: Shr -- was? a- - maid orr and he on a package ,o t tea,afaq is toyed with. XIII. The Origin of the Tap Dance an unusual "act for those who have wondered Just what has caused all this. , XIV. Final!. Lois LUnt has brought the whole vaudeville cast together for a last review; This is a comeback that would' be a credit to an athlete--. The directing committee is: Louisfe Shepard, A general manager; Vera Calder, manager of dramatics; Jean Pedersen, advertising manager; and Lois Lunt, stage manager. All ate students of the U. A. C. - At U. A. C WjlJ. Open This Month to March 2 Inclusive in a Dairy School according to Professor George B. Calne head , of the dairy husbandry department of the College. The School is being promoted by the dairy department at the college and the dairy committee bf the Cache County Farm Bureau is also cooperating in offering the School and making up the program. The program according to Professor Caine includes the feeding of dairy cattle, diseases of dairy cattle. Herd ImDrovement Association work and the presentation of honor roll certificates to deserving farmers, and a Holstein sale promoted by the Holstein breeders of Cache County. The entire first two days of the School will be devoted to the discussion of the feeding of ail types of dairy cattle and the entire third dav wilt be given over to lectures and discussions of diseases. Experiment Station and College men in dairy husbandary, animal husbandry, and veterinary science will all be available for the work of the School. The State will be present end will lecture on certain problems and the Western Division Dairy jff.ee will have representatives at the School. Some cow testers and err tain successful dairy farmers will also discuss subjects" on the program. , t Morning meetings will begin pt 10 oclock and the effrnoon meetings at 1 oclock.. Some afternoon excursions will probably be made and was with and benefactor, county detective William E. Jackson, who was found shot to death in the kitchen of Lieutenant Edward P. Leahy of the Wllllmantic police said Rice had confessed to former State Trooper Rowe H. Wheeler, but Edward J. Hickey, a county detective who has headed the investigation forces, refused to confirm this. Rice was arrested aHhe Jack-so- n home last night, after 25 hours of questioning Interrupted briefly for the interrogation, for the first time, of ( Mrs. Jacxson and her daughter, Juanita, 24. Questioning - of Rice was started Saturday- night-aft- er" ,from the Jackson funeral, at which he was a pallbearer. Detective Hickey revealed after the arrest, that he had asked Miss Jackson to invite Rice to be a of pallbearer for thA purpose breaking him down. He also disclosed that he had had Rice under surveillance since the night Jacksons- - body was found by Mrs Jackson and her daughter. , Hickey said thfe Jackson family told him that last Sunday that Jackson, on recovering from an attack of influenza, had ordered Rice from his home and previously, although he had allowed Rice to live there, he had quarreled with and acted "sourly toward him. ht3-ret- , newest sensation in The secret of the amazing tone quality and efficiency of Dynamic Speaker lies in a series of important improvements construction over the old type Dynamic Speaker. 30 South Alain theThilco Electro and refinements in Street Lofcau (g Fort Myers, Fla Thomas A. Edison will speak to the of the nation over the people radio from his winter home here on his 82nd birthday, Feb. 11. His son will introduce him from Orange. N- - J. His favorite songs artists chosen by him, sung by jwill complete the program. New York Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing company will treble its newspaper adver-itisin- g this year to tell the of the vital part electricity public in civilization. Plans call forplays 20,- 000 adyertisements In 500 cities. The decision comes after two years of research Into various media. S. C. R. A. Spartanburg, Golden, a Confederate veteran on his way by mule wagon from Oklahoma to attend a reunion of comrades at Charlotte, N. C. has come to the end of the trail.- - Whenhe was dozing by his camp fire, his clothes caugftrTirerHe died Tn a hospi- o Telephone 536. tal. t - - Interest Shown In State Says . 'f t 4 P' ' t.i iO : lLSSSviSL? ' , r v j T4jWMftWwifciWfcy$iilMirlft)rVii'A4MhiiliiiHiiflriii'iM(--riWV- 1 . A x j.. Itt. A romance of the Chicago Civic Opera company has ered with the marriage of Henry Weber (upper left) Marion Claire (lower right). Chicago (AP) Romance of real often results Irom stranger circumstances than those the music masters wrote into the wor'as greatest operas. There is, for instaice, the romance of Marion Calre, singer, end Henry conducto- -, Weoer, youthful members of the-- Chicago Civic Opera company,, who were married In the closing days this years season. Strange it is tha- Mirlon Cli.re daughter of an attorney, and Weber, 28, son of a wagon maker both native Chicagoans should be thrown together at the opera, performance of which, until the past few years, was left entirely to Europeans. Until they met hi Europe, both seeking the golden apple of musical-" success. - neither - knew- - the , ! ' Effie S. Barrows leaders Home demonstration throughout the state are doing excellent work in carrying on the Adult Leaders Training School held in November at the U. A. C. said Mrs. Effie S. Barrows, home management specialist of the service when she returned Friday from visits to various parts of the state. Our greatest difficulty in giving the home management work is to keep the classes down to a teachable size, she continued. The leaders have accomplished wonders with the Christmas gift when completed, project which, furnished numerous homes! with lamp shades, lamps, pillows; racks of different kinds, holders ? and many other useful and depofated articles that add beauty ana comfort- to the home. Now the women In the .special are interested Room project. Improvement They .are so enthused that ' I sat with the Art up uritil . midnight Club at Eureka giving the worx." At Milford.. Delta and Tintic Mrs. Barrows was graciously received by groups of women eager to receive .training in color application; dyeing for color qffect. and room improvement. From all parts of the state re; ports are .coining into the extension Office showing that the work given to the leaders at the training school is being enthusiastically received by the farm womens i t flow- - Cache Stake Old Folks and other. Miss Claire then was the wife of a childhood sweetheart. Weber had lived half his" life in Europe, studying, sometimes almost starving, to attain success. He was in Austria m its darkest days and many of his possessions were sold to buy food. Money from relatives could- - not reach him,- Weber conducted his first opera when he was 20. Five years ago the Civic opera company brought him home. Miss Claire obtained a divorce, and here the strangeness of fact is emphasized the Civic opera company discovered and signed her. Her debut had been made in the famous old city of opera Milan. The romance would have been more the storybook kind had Miss Claire and Weber bpen im- - The various wards inthe - Cache lt hold their Old- Folks reunions on the following dates: Benson Feb. 8. North Logan Feb. 15. Tenth Ward Feb. 19, Hyde Park Feb. 22. Fifth Ward Feb. 26. Ninth Ward Feb. 27 Third Ward Feb. 28. Fourth Ward March 5. Old Folks Central Committee. O stakd-wi- poverished geniuses. Here again real life is sometimes stranger than fiction; both are of wealthy families. On the crest of the Muottas Murail, near St. Mortiz, Switzerland, Is a hotel whose window at might have often been mistaken for stars, so high is it above the town. Jr 35 New Party and Evening DRESSES : M Have recently arrived Just in time for the Prom. 1 These are personally selected by our N . Y. Buyer and that means that you are getting the very latest and best at the lowest possible Price. I i'HiCC $167.00 WITHOUT TUBES THasaftoSaeg'. Pvtasn 0 Prices 50c, and 75c. um FLASHES OF LIFE PMUs New Is the Evening, 8:15 CHICAGO OPERA PAIR life Wllllmantic, Conn., Feb. 4 (AP) Trenor Rice, deputy sheriff former constable of Chaplin, under arrest today, charged the murder of his friend -- - - 35c. d Dairymen of the State win meet at the Utah Agricultural College during the week of February 26 Deputy Sheriff Is Charged With Murder ? 15c-an- MUSICBRINGS-ROMCE-1- n I 78ae Prices Group at $17.50 SEE OUR WINDOW i o |