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Show Make it a TT task want-a- d 7 WEATHER and get what that used machinery is worth. UTAH: Fair tonight, and Friday; cooler tonight in south- west portion. LOGAN, CACHE COUNTY, UTAH, THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1927. VOLUME L. GEN. J. H. McRAE II FLIGHT 111 PLANE TO Reports From Various (JP) COMMANDER Press from the manager of the Cable company GERMAN Found-lan- d said: Persons other that Peter OBrien, farmer, Harbor Grace, who heard aeroplane are Mrs. RAIDER FRISCO SAN FRANCISCO, May 12 The war is over, as 'far as Mayor Janies Rolph, Jr., and Count Felix Von Luckner, are concerned. More than a decade as comago Von Luckner, mander of the Geiman raider, Sea Eagle, earned the fear and respect of Pacific shippers by sinking 20 allied ships. He was so polite about it not a life was lost in the whole of his operations. Often he took the crews of doomed ships aboard the sea raider, willed and dined them and took them to safety. Yesterday he arrived - here on a Rolph who owned two of the ships which were sunk was on the leception comipittee. They talked about the ships that Luckner sent to Daw .Jones locker and laughed. (JP) em-pla- y. Another report that the plane had been heard off Placentia, New Foundland, was being investigated today. If borne out ths would indicate that .the fliers heard were following the approximate course mapped out ( Continued OF VISITS Hinto, wife of Manager Imperial Cable Company here, also John Stapleton, janitor, in Im perial Cable companys Both distinctly heard the noise of aeroplane engine between nine and ten oclock Monday morning. Sound appeared to be coming from the nrth-w'es- t. . IN CAPTURE OVERFLOWS KIN MEXICO CITY, May 12. P) More than 100 rebels have been killed in two nunoat with toderal forces with Rhine m Preparations All Set for Del Molino and San Jose de la Chamberlin and Ber-,pstate of Jai.sc .ays a Lind- - port received by President Cal Hop-of- f from War Minister Anvu-bergh Coming On The Jw night. This report iniorin- Scene May Have Hur- - efj the president that the nn ried Decision. jority of the gangs of Caihjic .extremists are concentrated at MINEOLA, N. Y., May 12.(P) i Juchipila canyon and that the Lieutenant Bertaud announe- - Avar minister lias oi derod a centration of troops for a lme today that he and Clarence on these bands. D. Chamberlin are planning to women and childForty-fivhop off tonight or early tomor- ren, relatives of rebels w ho are row morning on their proposed in hiding in the mountains, p flight to Paris in their have been the fedBellanca p.ane the Columbia. eral soldiers.capture , by Bertaud said the decision as to definite time of the take off would depend largely on the Loss of Lambs afternoon' weather report which By Storm Heavy is expected at 4 oclock. He exin Many Sections pressed doubt on the possibility y before of a Wyo.. May 12. but was confident he would be CHEYENNE, and ten per Between five CP) on his way to Paris early towas lost of cent the lamb crop morrow. blizzard of the Saturday during it is indicated MINEOLA, N. Y., May 12.(P) and Sunday, Clarence D. Chamberlin and from reports received from al. D. F. Ches his Lloyd Y. Bertaud sections of the state p ty of the Wyoming crop and who are planning a flight to Paris, said today they livestock reporting service said are awaiting 3 p. m. weather re- today. The central, eastern and port but declined to say whether southeastern to advance the hop portions suffered they planned off to before dark tonight, the heaviest losses because rather than at 1 a. m. Saturday. lambing and shearing were furMost of Charles A. Levine, financial ther along, he said. backer of the flight declined to the losses were in new born comment on the possibility of a lambs and calves. Losses in the western part hop-otonight but admitted that an earlier date than Sat- of the state were not severe urday was under consideration. both because the storm was Levine said Chamberlin and lighter and lambing was not Bertaud propose to land at Le well started. Fifteen to 20 per Bourget near Paris. He. said he Cent of the lambs Ixirn there had been jesting when he re- .duribgthe storm yere lost. marked 'Monday that the fliers' No heavy individual losses might circle to Eifel tower, have been reported but some touch their wheels at LeBour- - sections are so badly snowed in get fie.d and then proeede to tlrat full information is not yet England. ,, available. Bertaud, however, said the 3 p. m. weather report might LIVESTOCK WAR ON cause a change in present plans CHEYENNE, Wyo., May 12. for the hopoff, originally sche- (JP) Lon Roach, state law enduled for Saturday. forcement officer and his chie1 The Bellanca monoplane was assistant, W. C. Irving are in kept behind closed doors in its Dubois today to investigate hanger where mechanics replac- threatened trouble between the ed a metal propellor with a cattle and sheep interests there. wooden one. A citizen's meeting was called Observers at the flying field in Dubois recently to vote on believed that the approach of should be perwhether sheep Captain Charles A. Lindbergh, mitted in that district of the contendanother national forest. The er who is dug here in his Ryan Washakie one group leavdivided meeting from St. Louis, plane tonight a separate res and holding may have spurred on the back- ing voted fo and One sion. group ers of, the Bellanca flight. other the against sheep. iv-ta- I ocean before coming down. A message to the Canadian an BEGIN , Another person was added today to the list of those who claimed to have heard the roar Maj. Gen. James H. McRae, who has of an airplane motor through assumed command of the Second just the mist over New Foundland corps area, comprising the states of Monday morning, . lending New York, New Jersey and Delaware, weight to the theory that the with headquarters at Governors island. He succeeded General Summeratt, now Nungesser trans Atlantic plane chief .of staff. the from Paris actually spanned at Harber Grace, New PORTRAITS KILL REBELS AND Zt er Anglo-Americ- TENT THEATRE IN I GUBERNATORIAL i Sources. That Motor Went Over New Found-lan- d About Time Nun-gessWas Due to Arrive. HALIFAX, N. S., May 12 CAILES FORCES P on Pago Two) visit..-Mayor- - City Fathers in Legal Combat at Idaho Falls, Idaho IDAHO ? May 12 (JP) for Mayor council of Request Ralph Louis and the present Chaplin city administration for delay Deadlocked, Are until tpmoirow morning of the Given Discharge Barsilla petition of Mayor-eleto new' council Clark and' the oust them from office, was NEW YORK,, May 12 (ff Unable to agree on whether franted in the district court Charlie Chaplins motion picture this here Judge Shoulder morning. Arms was pirated George Edgington agreed with from The Rookie a scenario dePaul T. Peterson that the. written by Lee Loeb, disinfectfense has not been given suf- ant salesmen and author, the ficient time in which to formu- federal court jury hearing the late its case. Ralph Elbough, case was discharged early tocounsel for plaintiff, resisted day. the request, contending that if said they stood 10 to a delay was granted it should 2 Jurymen for Loeb when they reported the they were not be for later than hopelessly deadlockafternoon session today. ed after almost eight hours deliberation. They said the 10 Oldest Prisoner jurors were in favor of awarding the full amount sought by in Joliet Loeb, $50,000. Observes Birthday Mortimer Hays, Loebs counWilliam J. sel, asked Judge JOLIET, Ills., May 12 (JP) Bondy to set the case for reOld Charlie Lindwell, the oldest trial, but the court disclaimed prisoner in Joliet penitentiary ability to do so, expressing the and possibly the oldest in the doubt that a re trial would be country yesterday observed his possible at this term. 98th birthday, just as he has .Chaplin, during the trial took observed every milestone siigce the stand to deny Loebs allega1900 and he probably will ob- tions. He said no scenario was serve them all until he receives used and that all his stories are the pardon of death. He re- made up while they are being ceived the life sentence in 1900 filmed. for murder for which he alLoeb declared he had submitways denied committing. He ted his scenai-ito Chaplin aftref used, a pardon a few years er it whs rejected, Chaplin proago maintaining he was too old ducer! his Shoulder Arms.. to face the world. FA-LL- Jury ct Jail e non-sto- get-awa- co-pil- non-sto- ff J , trans-Atlant- NUMBER 113. ic EE S Commissioner and Attorney Exchange Hot Retorts Over Discussion of License Question Peery Defends Property Rights. South Dakota Families' Driven Front Homes As Water Inundates Thousands of Acres of Sparsely Settled Land Damage Eestimates. OGDEN. May 12.(P) City Commissioner Hannan W. Peery and City Attorney A. W. Agee engaged in a verbal duel at todays meeting of the city commission. The question under discussion had to do with the license fees to be collected from a stock company which has established its theatre in a tent and also whether the city shall revise its ordinance to permit the tent to remain in what is known as the fire limits. Mr. Peery is a theatre owner and he with other theatre owners insist the license fee shall be high enough to correspond with the taxes paid by the permanent theatres and that the fire limit ordinance should not be amended in the YANKTON, S. D.; May 12 All lowlands between. Spring-fiel- d interest of the tent theatre. At todays meeting Commissioner Peery violently charged that the city attorney was swayed in his opinions "bn the question because a member of the law firm with which he is associated is representing the owner of the property on which the tent theatre is situated. Mr. Agee heatedly denied this. He shook his finger in Commissioner Peerys face .and declared the charge is cowardly.1 Commissioner Peery retorted that Air Agee was unfit to be city attorney because he was associated with a firm that represents corporations. - - Earlier in the discussion Commissioner Peery charged that the chamber of commerce had been called off from taking a hand in the tent theatre controversy because James II. president of the chamber, is counsel for the owner of the land on which the tent stands. -- De-vin- e, This was vigorously denied. Mayor George E. Browning took vigorous exception to Com- missioner Peerys charges against the city attorney, declaring he had full confidence in the integrity of Mr. Agee. Building Wrecked in DallasTexas Captain Lindberg Pace With Making Ready for Keeping Old Time Mormon. Atlantic Contest Families in Utah CHKYR.VNE, Wyo.. May 12 Tucking Iiih VnivtTstty of- gan engineering degree In a bag, Frank Wyoming in Kmernnn 1SU4 (A)) Michihand- eauie to to 'grow" with thy wnt. leaving the railroad, and Wheeler, a distance of 60 mile.Sf are reported under flood waters of the Missouri river today with 60 to 75 families driven from their . i homes. Pioneer residents of. Wheeler declare that the flood there is the worst in 55 years. , , Four families were reported marooned on the Nebraska lowlands below Niobrara, but they are said to be in no danger. The river went out of. its banks west of Vermillion, S. D., this morning, inundating about 5,000 acres in the sparsely 'settled bottoms district. . , he bought a hat and rode lufl miles on horseback to Cora, where he became the town merchant and postmaster. He surveyed tile route lor the Saratoga & Kncamptuent railroad sh his lirst professional venture. Then he branched into Irrigation project work. Jumped to state engineer and last fall defeated Mrs. Nellie Taylor Ross, first woman governor. SOVIET DELEGATION HEADQUARTERS IN England; raided HOOVER ESTIMATES MEMIIIS, May 12 (JP) Secretary Hoover today estimated the damage thus far inflicted b the Mississippi flood probably will amount to between $250,1)00,000 and $300,000,000. The tragedy of it is that it is impossible to tell how much greater the loss will be before the disaster reaches its climax, 1, lie said. The secretary conferred with Red Cross official .here ' after an inspection ..trip- of the lower valley. ; LONDON, May 12 (JP) Police today raided Arcos House, the headquarters' of the , Soviet trade delegation here. After the, raid uniformed Uhkl police guarded the dooi-vmreiftUed admisHipn' to all callers. Nd ' explanation was forthcomigltt Luncheons ing from any quarter and the to Be Served On officer in charge of the police Silver Wings operations refused to talk. The which is situated in building, Mooregate near the bank of LONDON, May 12' - (JP) England, is also the head- Passengers using the new ima perial airways Silver Wings, quarters of the planes when they are put into society league.. . service on the London-Pari- s route will be able to have Rock Springs liquid refreshments and light, Hotel Proprietor luncheons served them. . Shoots Himself The Silver Wings air described" as- embodying a deservice, ROCK carrying a SPRINGS, Wyo., May luxe , James D. Shannon, pro- waiter in charge of a buffet 12.(JP) prietor of a hotel at Dines, near from which the refreshments .here, is dead and his wife is In are served. Each plane has upa hospital with a bullet in her holstered chairs for 20 past arm, following what the police sengers, say was a domestic quarrel at More Highways to the Shannon hotel last rrtit. Shannon is believed to have Be Surfaced in shot his wife and then tuired State of Idaho the weapon on himself, dying - I - y f Anglo-Russi- - DALLAS, Texas, May 12.(T) Investigation of the cause of the explosion which killed six and injured 43 persons and instantly with a bullet through BOISE, May 12 (A5) --Bids wrecked a two story building his heart. An inquest will be be called , by the state wiil ROOSEVELT FIELD, N. Y., here last night revolved today Iheld Saturday afternoon. JACKSONVILLE. bureau Ills., May of highways for the 12 Charles about two mysteries gas meter (JP) Captain May - Samuel of A. of 17.8 miles 12 gravel Long surfacing landed 5:37 at who here are to have (P) said Lindbergh inspectors of the Lost River highway this evening, preparatory to Nortonville, became a father for tampered with the gas meters Sheep Herders from the Bingham county line Trapped By Snow hopping off for Paris. the twenty first time yesterday. prior to the explosion. to Arco, all in Butte county. II. M. twice been owner has of a store Mr. Long, who Mavey, Frozen to Death The agreement of the departST. LOUIS, May 12 (JP) years old in the wrecked building told married, is sixty-nin- e ment of public works ' to imCaptain Charles Lindberg, only and his wife is 25. Mr, Longs police two men called late yestThe DENVER, May 12 (JP) lone pilot entered in the $25,-00- 0 progeny now those erday afternoon' to look at the death toll of the week-en- d storm prove the inimportant arterial concooperation with Orteig of Herbert Clayton, a neighbor, gas meter" and that he saw in Montana and Wyoming stood highway test, left here this morning on whose twentieth child was born them tinkering with it, but at seven today as delayed re- the federal government and the second lap of his thought nothing of it at the ports of persons frozen to death Butte county was reached in. recently. time. yesterday with flight for Roosevelt in blizzards were tabulated. . a conference field, L. I. where he expected to making the trip in his giant Gas company books fail to Three of1 the storms victims Butte county officials with Joe D. Wood commissioner of put his Ryan monoplane into seaplane in five hours and 35 show a record of such an in- were sheep herders, trapped by public works. shape for the neW York to Paris minutes. and officials spection deny that snow and unseasonal hop. of their employes had been swirling ahy cold as they followed their sheep Leaying at 8:12 a. m., the' NEW YORK. May 12. (A) sent to the building. oc- Extra Dividend , Six of the seven deaths former St. air The United States weather bur near in three curred Wyoming, Has Been Declared mail pilot expected to complete call toddy sent word to Clarence Salt Lake Taxi Beet Acreage in Laramie and one in Eastern the 950 mile airplane journey D. Chamberlin and Lloyd BerBy General Motors Colorado District in ten hours. Lindbergh was un- taud who Driver Attacked Montana. to hop off tohope accompanied oi) the trip today, NEW YORK, May 12. (A) night or early tomorrow on of The as on his planned SALT LAKE CITY, May 12 Judge DENVER, May (P) Directors of General Motors to p Paris, their flight Great Wetsern Sugar company flight. Completing a 1.550 that there is unsettled weather (P) During the temporary abSalt Lake Dead corporation today declared an p announced today it had placed miles sence flight from of his mother from their extra cash, dividend of ; '$2 a western on the no storms to St. Louis yesterday in but under contract for this year the home this afternoon, Fred SALT LAKE CITY. May 12 share on the common stock." in and Atlantic fair the of .half, largest sugar beet growing acre-a- e T4 hours and five,, minutes, weather on the eastern half. Cowcill, 20 years old, a taxi (P) Judge Noel S. Pratt, of the addition to the regular quarterin the companys history. Lind bergh made the longest , and The unsettled cloudy driver, was attacked by an un- civil division of the city court ly dividend of. $2., The 1927 acreage totals ap- flight in this 'country of anj - known assailant and his skull died this morning in a; local dividends weather Regular the forecasjquarterly "weather, proximately 295,000 acres, an unaccompanied pilot, according a hatchet. hospital following ah illness of of, $1.50 on the preferred and er said, extends from the Gran fractured with increase of 10,000 acres over the to available records. he cannot re- two weeks. Physicians say ebenture stocks and $1.75 on 35. to Banks longitude 1926 figure. Of the total about cover. 7 per cent preferred also the endof Mrs. and Mr. was blanket a There fog acres PINEDO located The(son are FLYING in AGAIN 192,000 Police believe were the authorized. The extra dihe edit W. was Mathoni Grand Pratt off Banks robbery Northern Colorado. The conCHARLESTON, S. C., May 12 ing from the motive for the crime and a $5cated in the local schools and vidend bn the common is payatracted area includes 67,000 (P) Commander Francesco de New Foundland southerly y acres in th$ North Platte valley Pinedo, the Italian flier; continto the steamship lanes bill was found oh the floor near, graduated from the 7 University ble July 5 and the regular on June ,13. Cash and of Western Nebraska and 36,- - uing his this air voyafternoon, .he added. He the prostrate form of the man, 0f Utah. He was first elected 000 acres in the Billings-Iwe- ll age arrived in Charleston at did. not make any forecasts for a blood stained hatch" nDo iva?1 10 the city court bend, ill I; ? ' .marketable securities shawni ii i.COi'. 41 'and r;:le;ad m lyrtj .o Ybrnit district. i.y, p. m. today from Philadelphia 'tomorrow. : . . out-numb- er trans-Atlant- ic trans-continent- al " - o Irene Gimbel Dead DENVER, May l2 (AV-Mi- ss Irene Gimbel 16, of Lincoln, Illinois, died last night after fasting 59 days and then subsisting 17 days on a liquid diet. The coroner said death was due to pneumonia with her general weakened condition as a tributary cause. . Louis-Chica- 'll. go Pratt trans-Atlant- ic non-sto- San-Die- non-sto- go . . Frosts in Japan TOK 10, May 12 CP) Severe frosts have damaged the mulberry crop in entral Japan to the estixnated extent of $5,000,-- 1 000 pro-"bab- ly qtnr-jteri- four-contine- fl-V'.i- |