Show SUITOSY MORNING AUGUST 18 G O P THE OGDEN STAN DARD - EXAMINED Locality of Rogers Post Crash PLANS FARf1 PROGRAM FOR IIAUPTMANN AAA RIVALING :'r:'V-r'X-:i'X:- He Directs Fight for His Release From Death s : ' Campaign Plank Must Be Acceptable to Corn Hog and Wheat Belt WASHINGTON Aug 17— (AP) — Behind the thumping that already has signalled the opening of the 1936 political campaign western Republicans f have set themselves at the Job of working out a farm program th$y hope will get more votes than the AAA This was disclosed by a leading Republican- today to round out a week of fast political developments Some of the happenings were: ON THIRD PARTY Senator Long Democrat Louisiana" promised to run on a third party ticket if President Roosevelt were renominated and the Louisl- anan did not like the Republican nominee Colonel Frank Knox Chicago publisher and Senator Borah of Idaho were mentioned strongly as Republican nominees New invitations came from Re publicans for a test of New Dea! strength in Illinois and Ohio through special elections Ogden Mills secretary of the treasury under former President Hoover said at Chautauqua N Y tom-to- m - j ! ) j - that the new deal! was slaying In euviauai iioerty dt setting up an economic system based on coer I cion' Cliff Woodward national president of young Democrat clubs In the midst of arrangements for a national convention" of these clubs Milwaukee next! week predicted the young people 'would re - elect President Roosevelt t Democratic strategists set about measuring' sentiment for a const! rational change to! give the federal government stroneer powers ' 17--(A- from uneventful for Bruno Richard Hauptmann From his cell six paces from the death chamber he has helped direct his fight for life and at the same time has seen four others walk to the electric chair He has been referee in 'his at torney's verbal wars studied his defense to many civil suits begun an intensive study of the bible and r written a' book Sometimes he is sullen and sad His wife Anna who never misses one of her allotted--twovisits a month once said she found tears trickling down his face Sometimes he makes the death fiouse ring with laughter He did when his wife showed him a picture of their son Mannfried in a aress ana wnen she described girl's his This Associated Press map Indicates where Will Rogers humorist exploits in upsetting a coffee pot and his flying friend Wiley Post plunged to their deaths in an air- and turning on all faucets In the plane 15 miles south of Point Barrow They were flying from bathroom flooding it Fairbanks to visit Charles Brower of Point Bar- Sometimes he is deeply religious row" and storekeeper there 51"mayor His spiritual adviser the Rev years D G Werner of New York City visits him weekly brings church magazines and books and says Haptmann enjoys them Hauptmann's last words to his four neighbors whose Robison Chloe hands he shook as Correspondent wnf a their death were "praythv to God" Morgan News MORGAN PLANS MORGAN SCOUTS AS FAIR EVENT JOIN IN EVENT Board Decides To Charge Entry Fee s For All Help Carry Pony Exjpress Mail From Summit To Echo MORGAN Exhibitors MORGAN Aug 17—At the of the Morgan county fair board here Plans were made for enter tainment features of a free program on the fair grounds nightly during the fair September 5 0 7 in add! tlon to the regular rodeo and sports 17 — Gilbert Aug their plans for the Francis chairman of the next campaign western Republi- district Boy Scouts reportsMorgan cans said then hardest problem Morgan county participated in that the would be adopting a farm plank ac- celebration of the pony express here ceptable to the corn hog and wheat and that six boys from the Morgan I I - county troops carried the mail from I program each afternoon the summit of "Riar Mountain tn The board decided that there d live- Echo a distance of 28 miles in two ? entry'fee for all also for hours This is considered record f XFre? atwno thejalr si bJ line contestants ered Due to the fact that the Salt Lake county boys got lost on the west side of the mountain the ride was delayed about three hours The "Butthe question5 that probably Morgan waited until three will be of more" puzzling force than o'clock atboys the top to receive the anything else for us is the proper mail which should have arrived at ' treatment of the farmer i noon "It will be a dominant question Morgan scouts with their horses for we' all know the Republicans were stationed at equal distant must have the farm vote" and no time was lost in transpoints Contending the corn - hog and ferring the mail Each of the boys wheat areas were 85 per cent Re- rode at high speed The boys who publican normally this leader said carried the mail through this ter O ? r°d° ride in the A5! ZnttSZ2L ZSTZ uic uutuer lat contest Two dollars was set as fee for the horse pulling coSS and 25 cents for entry in the swine sheep and poultry department ' It was said that these fees apply on season tickets for the fair and that no person will be allowed more than one family season ticket on the en try fees paid The fair board reports that plans are developing rapidly and the prospects are good for many exhibits and entertainments at the fair Tickets will be on sale later but those who expect to enter livestock should not buy their tickets until they enter their livestock at the fair at which time entry fees will be allowed on purchase price of ' ticket The board is now ready to receive bids on concessions The committee consisting of Theron Taggart chairman C R Richards and E M Crouch will handle' the bids They request that bids be given to them by August 25 and reserve the right to reject any and all bids if they are found to be unsatisfactory The premium list has been mailed and anyone who has not received one may ob tain a copy by calling on C R Richards chairman of the premium list and advertising com mittee it was said the party platform and the candiin the order of the ride made date must stand for some perman- - ritory were Jessie Kilburn Jay Porter program to put the farmer on a Earl Francis Clyde Richards Jay with industry J Hulet and Norman Toone Mr said he felt the necessity of Francis reports that the who boys "working out something that will be participated were all thrilled at the a good substitute for AAA" of taking part in the "We must have a permanent plan opportunity Mr Francis drove pony express to take its place" he added to the top of Big Mountain and acTHREE WAYS LOOM companied the boys assisting with ' He said there were three p all changes through the county already known ways of approaching the : 4 Y problem— alt intimately related One he said was the present AAA Sign plan of paying the farmer process- : ing tax benefits for cutting acreage of Compliance to raise prices ' The others were the equalization fee principle of segregating domes- MORGAN Aug 17 — Proof of tic requirements from the surplus Compliance on the sugar beet adthereby making the farm tariff ef- - justment program has been prefectivp- n1 tVl riehenfiiiu the past! week in the uvwuviuc Win f pared during piait office!! Most of the a county on agent's oounty paying exports from K the treasury growers have signed the papers r Whether the tentative plan be which have been forward to Wash — for payment ington studied would embrace of ing C R Richards agent states that me latter two ideas jwas notany made this proof of compliance will bring piain out it was Indicated they a final payment of 75c per ton on De as a basis used migm The principal aim would be the the 1934 sugar beet crop and the advance 1935 payment of 80c per Republican leader said" to keep the ton growers who have not issuer on a parity mm Industry in called Those at office to sign these the power through soma papers are purchasing" : to do so as soon : urged or making the farm tariff as The first group has possible - means enectjye vi beert sent taway arid the others rev H-i- — — I-r maining will be taken care of as r soon as possible Mr Richards reAloysus' the "office boy got his f Siffns bath ports early Saturday 1 r: Four-Ye- ar He was out in the rain at six 4-- H o'clock yelling to everyone "ReClub Schedules member the Jphnston flood" Carl Werner Oeden naw re— iff er is credited with one more enlist The storm did at lot of good howrumseif tie even if he did get water on the ever 4 Omens the main station 'in Salt Lake for it washed the tomato brain MORGAN— 17 AugMorgan plants sugar beets and flowers a£d Oounty at a r Although Werner's "enlistment was cent to freshen the lawns and meeting decided to arrange for helped for four-ye' he has only the annual period shrubs chrt members' eduaoou xs montns to serve before he cational tour for the last wpf - Sol will be eligible-fo'retirement after August ' y - :i Irrigated by furrowing his 20 years service :He"exnerts tn re and brow putting his bald head out Frank Rich chairman main on recruiting duty in Ogden Who knows in his window of the mittee appointed to arrange for the UULU retirement ne said he may— childhood second — trip reports that the present plan —4f— — is to visit Murray where th rih Get a second crop of hair members and leaders will be taken Crop To Rise the American! through Smino r Maximum temperature on Satur Refining company plant degrees A visit will also be matr fti day was 87 degrees ana reSis- blanket factory of prpsure parometrio Wooleii me o'ciock six at raoitture tered ax Murray County Agent C —which came nearly all at once— WASHINGTON Aug 17— (AP)— Anus R states that tvi Ricnards ine agriculture department today mittee is at work was AO Inch precipitation estimated that world wheat UUs which tioa ior 23 countries In 1935 would tion of a will include transportaone year ago with group of 75 to 100 club S3Skies wereaclear to U30385000 bushels plenty hot maximum degrees Onse department said this com xnemDers minimum tempera56 and degrees 44 i Oent Growers Proof Paper O 4 ' -- - " : For Period iter - i -y-- : Educational Jaunt re-enlis- ted i : i - - - 4-- -- H club-leaders ar 4-- H - r ' " -- Vheat Department Declares J" the-Uta- -- ffS tHVr file Atp rwi vti -- Tiril at 48455000 tries was estimated Dusneis or aDoui 13 per cent more man rne laai production u f — — i ture DENVER Aug 17— (AP)—The double deck of highest price for a hogs in Denver for eight years $3- 53375 or $1220 a hundredweight was paid today to George N prin- j gle of Parks Neb There were 138 hogs 'in the ship-- ment and the price Pringle received was approximately 500 per cent higher than' the market price three j1 years ago Modern astronomers do hot look for new stars by stargazing but by of the studying photographs heavens - ' ' m Motions To Diskis: Who's Who To Ignore Suits Milling Argued Protests of Ashurst - 1wrnen maicn is DtrucK ALSO WATCHES KEY Mrs Morgan also can operate the radio and she stands watch at the key when her husband is out hunt- he the best known noncommissioned officers in the army because of the numerous times when desolate isolated Barrow has been in the hews" ' There was the time last spring when influenza gripped the Eskimo population along the Arctic rim of Alaska and Morgan stood long watches at his radio instruments sending and receiving messages and turning to during his rest periods to work with Dr Henry W Greist medical missionary and the few other whites in nursing the sick and 17-(- FREIGHT RATE caring for the dead LINDBERGH VISIT There was the time Col and Mrs Charles A Lindbergh arrived in Barrow from Aklavik N W Tt having covered the entire Arctic coast by airplane en route from the Canadian settlement to the even more isolated settlement on Point Barrow And there have been dozens of other times when Barrow away up near "the top of the world" has been news-wortand Sergeant Morgan's fingers have pounded the key which told the news to the world His white neighbors are a medical missionary a school teacher whalers traders and trappers His native neighbors are Eskimos either the hy residents of the settlement or the migrating clans which move up and down coast hunting whales and seals and trading carved ivory and skins for white man's food and weapons And Sergeant Morgan likes it his colleagues here say He's a frontiersman and Barrow is the last frontier 300 f FOUR INJURED 1 RISEREFU8ED IN CAR CRASH State Public Utilities De- Parked Auto Knocked nies Railroad Down Bank In Wvomincr: f Petition t£ Boy 3 Leg Broken Is one of amtmmmmmmmmmm- ln-ter-st- ate tion the "difficulties large Utah in here dustrial and manufacturing interests are contending with in order to keep going and afford the carriers the heavy tonnage they now are enjoying as a result of their op- :: — r— j erations" n — Approximately 7800 fatal accidents occur annually in British homes These are caused by open kitchen fires high windows and cupboards stairs without handrails and steep dark cellar steps CHICAGO Aug 17— (UP)— The Institute of American Meat Pack ers favoring a corn diet for hogs told housewives today that if their pork chops are oily and" soft the chances are that the pig was fed toy beans Y°ung Thief Sought Man Hanged By Heels Of a total of 54 births reported during the week to the city board of health 36 girl arrivals were recorded just twice as many as the boys The complete list Is as fol- REEDLEY Aug 17— (AP)— A net lows: of peace officers spread over southJoseph A and Sarah Robinson eastern Fresno county today in a Oborn 832 Twenty-thir- d street a search for a young man in a blue poy automobile who beat and robbed uavia w and Dorothy Adams J H Rogers 75 at his home near neeoe 3256 pgden avenue a girl weeaiey and left him bound and wuiiam li and LaVon Knight hanging by his heels from a pole Heslop Plain City a girl in a clothes closet Jesse N and Dorothy Blackman Rogers wriggled his feet loose from Hansen 2575 Jackson avenue a girl the suitcase straps with which they L and Hazel Lockhead Chester were lashed to the pole and man- waraeu 2740 Jefferson avenue a aged to rnake his way to a neighbor waa orougnt nim to Constable Thomas L and Helen Whitsides J Goodner here The assailant es-F waiceiieid Provo a eirl caped with $25 and a check for $35 Nelson T and Evelyn' Neuteboom f isasson Madison avenue a girl jwiwara J-- and Maude HIpwell Asrain ua"wi jottJaattiver drive a girl " " xieien auison Hug- D U Uv3 ' Students Will Keceive red era! Aid 2341 avenue a gin ana Mary Mora Norilga w xvecves avenue a ooy SALT LAKE CITY" Aug 17— uoraua vv ana AliCft (AP)— Dr Francis W Kirkham di- xiarnes 303 WaU avenue pin rector of the Utah youth adminisArviIla Br°wn France tration said today he had received f ndavenue a TToT-lrT-- o oof? jjjijt DOy word from Aubrey Williams nationIra L and Gladys Peterson al executive director that financial 3123 Pacific avenue a bpyT Age ' assistance will be granted again Clifford J and Mulrel Comns Anthis year by the federal government derson 3244 Childs avenue a elrl to needy students in colleges and iaisworth C and Naomi Paxton universities No mention was made of the vveiuuer iuzi tsixteenth street a girl amount Utah would receive Donald and Agnes Shearer Mc- ' -- V: wiooon 'nirty-fir- st street a boy PWA Allots Sum for John and HpnHfta niry jj Inna : miL oncl "-n- Farleys: And Shirley 1 emple On Way Home Call 685 boy-- HONOLULU Ainr Postmaster General With Mrs FarW Ambrose i7rAP James 2659 Fariv Uf Cprn " rZZ Mr7rTr "M M a" Y" imer Lurllne tnrfav r —JiTVZir a here concluding Shirley Temple child movie star and her parents were passengers on the same ship returning to Holly- — — f Thief Takes Tackle wood I o' 910 ortrt Mhmii T r o: w "axil T- -t CZ? wanue rf a rTIUr' aveaue a fu °upe 5-- i-ii — ixoy- girL gin Rf Orville G and EUnora t "O" iiuAixics Aooeny a ooy Kenneth N and Virginia Dayton auo wasnington avenue a boy Glen J and Lois Chard Ward tii -- Sends Back License street ' a Twenty-seven- th : Rulon - ieaaut! treorge KODertson necessity in every home —but in many cases it is an annoying problem De- - Mary WASHINGTON Aue 17 — ( AP— y?En?- - 3712 Ogden avenue a bov President Roosevelt today allotted d Merle Glines ME" $1546882 of work relief funds for of er 316I stevens avenue a boy 45i ter- wnt rinnaHnn Walter E SM TXTnll m CE federal PWA projects Communities- - 5?g50n 622 twenty-sixt- h street a t will borrow the remaining siRfia?- - P°Z' 789 either privately or from the PWA Chadwick Jack- T "an(L a Km £ revoivmg fund AUotments Included: UyTtl Courtright TfrntT A xaano— boundary street a county— grant of $7772 to drainage district No 9 JVrtt f for pumping station and other lm- Josephine Cazajons provements loan of $9500 from girl Pden aVan Frank and Leyonna PWA Komryn 3806 °8tfe avenue a boy Ernest P and Laura Phillips Hoggs Plain City a girl - Hot Water is a t? Idaho Drain Project aMenfventeenta ana Davis L We are' socoRfi&Snt we HSvi Hie Water problem from every possible "dKSyour viewpoint that we are ready-t- install Electric Water Heating in your home on a trial without your investing one cent unless this servicers entirely satisfactory to you Hot' 60-d- ay Try it for 60 days at our rfiB If you are not convmce'd that it is a superior method that it brings you a service beyond comparison at a remarkably low cost then wo' will take it out and refund yKateyer have -- v£S payments you made on tHe equipment Many famiKes have olreaHy taken advantage of this offer Grasp this for "a y demonstration opirtunity "" in your home! i 60-da- " View A DOy v and Lucille Cornelia 304 Twentieth street a EASY TERMS: $5:00 dovn Monthly pay- ments as low as $250 t7-Lf- : 17-(A- WRIGHT'S r J r J Girls Double Boy Total In Birth Reports ery was impossible May Wo tcdlc It lover wiir you? Drop into our stcrs fcr phon© obligation us r There's "" ' Packers Say Chops Oily From Soybeans te -- ! A AP)— r SALT LAKE CITY Aug 17— (AP) ROCK SPRINGS Wvo Aur17— —The state public utilities commis- (AP)—Four persons were seriously sion today denied a petition of injured when their automobile on the highway about 14 steam and electric railroads operat- parked miles j west was sldeswiped by another car and knocked down a steep ing in Utah to increase intra-sta- te bank today rates to freight 'correspond with The! most seriously rates put into effect last injured was Leatherman of Roseton Okla April by the interstate commerce Roy who was brought to a hospital here commission The commission said Its 'opinion with a fractured leg and cuts in a similar case in 1933 holding an The others are Mrs Paul D Kinincrease in rates was not justified ney ofa Dodge City Kan who suffered concussion and her applies with equal effect today Any husband brain and their young son who was increase it held might bring were less seriously bruised and cut a loss in revenue four were traveling to Idaho "All traffic is potentially comp- inThe a car pulling a trailer passenger etitive" said an opinion written by told authorities Leatherman They Chairman E E Corfman "None of had car to a tire the parked repair it is tied to the rails" when the accident occurred The The commission held that while other machine knocked the parked seeking to impose surcharges as a auto and trailer down an embankmatter of emergency relief the car- ment Names of occupants of riers had not taken into considera- the other machine the were not learned the-Arcti- c ing or fishing to replenish their of a larder or off on one of the missions tragic prank by unidentified by- - such R fae made to rescue the bodies stander at an American Legion of the noted ers from their wreck-stre- et ed Plane last Thursday night show was near death from terrible burns suffered today Bom at ayson Utah when a match was applied to a "hula" Sergeant Morgan enlisted inin 1901 the skirt he was wearing The show was arm5r nearly 15 years' ago He ac- parc oi tne legion state convention cePtea assignment to Barrow xicrc said Nelson Oak- B1Mlu8n at tne end of the uge resiaent prooabiy will die Nelson and a group of other Le gionnalres were entertaining atrowd on the street when a man unniieri a match to his ing with pain Nelson fanned the flames by running He was caught bv bvstander hut v nfi w so badly burned physicians fear- Ore Aug ACPALLES Olaf Nelson the vrrri an girl Harry s and Lois Biddulph Cra- PORTLAND Ore Aug 47— (AP) —A thief stole George Imboden's gun 829 ' Twenty-seven- th street a boy entire fishing tackle BOISE Ida AUJ? kit TUT- nbut apparc Darwin and Beth Hilton Van de Vioas 10 Clsmiss the suits nf the CHICAGO Aug IT— (UP) — The enuy aicuj-- care to nave a case of Graaff R 2763 Jefferson avenue a Crowthers Brothers Milling Com- - name of Senator Henry P Ashurst niistaken identity on his mind bedens fishing license was re-- boy Jones Brothers ODem Ariz) will be listed in !Who's pany Inc and-th- e Gene F and Betty Earl Blair 2423 company both of- - Malad Who In America" whether he wants turned in the next mall Kiesel avenue a boy City ida: were argued here in fed- - it there or not ciai oisiriCC Court tnrtav Hv oh Albert N Marquis publisher of torneys for the milliner the fat red-cov- er book said John R Vilev internal IMPORTANT SALE Ashurst's protests In Washington OPEN ALL DAT lector fcr Idaho whom they seek against the listing of his name SUNDAY to restrain from collecting the would be ignored OF FUm'iTURE! processing tax Complete - repair and "Senators certainly qualify as Aiier near in or th inrnimont parts service really prominent people so it's go-in—OIL—TIHE3 fLxed GAS the time for he said fudsCavanah See the Back Pase First Sertirm the filing of briefs by the two sides ing — 4-ror Good News to All Home Own- - ! HJia continued an order restraining KILLED BY BOLT the collector from collecting the tax 1 crs and lovers of Fine Furniture! PRICE Utah Aug P)— Until the suits an flnalTw Funeral arrangements were being termined by the court made today for Charles Sonberg 65 Under the asrriciltiira1 tn u a rancher of this district 1 who was liicm aci aot vuev mu5t roller 2f killed by lightning Thursday as he cents cn each bushel rf whpat took refuge from a rain storm be 1 Top OTown House - Third Floor 1 processed cy millers neath a tree r et o rt v OlLLV U0g5 Dnilg T Ti TJl if man 1 u licuraiicl iS1 - -- FREE PROGRAM PLANS FRAMED belt One prominent westerner put it this way: r "We all agree on a' balanced budg ec sound money an adequate pro- tective tariff the constitution re-- ? ductlon of - governmental expenditures and opposition to foreign ed so-call- Tech-wor- ld i - In framing : SPT?' ug' nichal Staff Sergeant Stanley Mor gan the signal corpsman at Barrow who recovered the bodies of Will Rogers and Wiley Post will take his first furlough and visit the United States this fall for the first time since he and Mrs Morgan entered the barren lands of northern Alaska seven years ago Joseph B L Hickerson office manager for the signal corps here recalled today that Sergt and Mrs Morgan went to Point Barrow northernmost tip of America seven years ago about the time the corps established its station there HIS FIRST TIME OUT The sergeant has never left his station since "Mrs Morgan came outside once since they went in" Hickerson said "dus nis trip early this fall will be Morgan's first since he went in" The Morgans have two children and despite the lonely isolated post on the shores of the Arctic closed by pack ice to shipping except for a few brief weeks in summer and available to airplanes only between Arctic storms "It's home to the Morgans" The sergeant— hell be 35 years old next February 26— is the United States government to the few whites and the few hundreds of Eskimos north of "71 Hickerson sold Morgan is not only the signal corps radio operator but he is the United States commissioner— "the law" north of the 71st degree of latitude— and the department of agriculture's weather bureau reporter Cell Block V P)TRENTON N J Aug Six months of life' in the state prison: death house have been far at 0 Furlough of World" job f : ELECTRICITY IS THE BIGGEST BARGAIN IN THE HOME 4 |