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Show T & HI JULY WHEAT High Low. Close - - . T.:..rr$i24 r - $120 5-- 8 $1.21 1- -2 .ii. WEATHLR UTAH: Fair tonigfU and Sunday; 'little change in temperature. IDAHO: Fair, Unchanged. A QiJ LOGAN, CACHE COUNTY, yULUME LIL t UTAH, SATURDAY, ,H LY 6, 192th NUMBER' 158. ISTli CLEVELAND FLIERS ESTABLISH ENDURANCE MARK Attempts Comeback -- W EUROPEI II! City of Cleveland Of Steaming Water While Watching Castle Geyser. In Yellowstone Slipped Into Pool Lived Park Forty-eigh- mained In Air For1 More Than A Week Twenty Four Contacts Made For Refueling Crowds Cheer. t Hours. Crop Failure Cheats Farm Board of Glory By John P. Boughan Associated Press Market Editor ' Chicago, July 6 (pj Best chances of glory for the new farm relief board have apparently been snatched .away in advance by shattering of crop prospects for spring wheat. Leading authorities here said today that as a result of drought, all promise for an average yield offspring wheat this season either in Canada or the United Stales seems gone and that- before the farm relief board has even been organized, the wheat market is "taking care of itself with prices up in one of the most surprising ever advances - known. Compared with a wheat values showed 8 8 c to 9 per bushel, with corn up, oats showing 3 7-- week ago, morning advance this 3-- 4c 3- - to 4 3-- 8c to 4 gain and provisions varying from i5e decline to a rise of 10c. So rapid have been the upward swing of wheat prices that talk already is current that the farm lelicf boards expected movement to have a wheat price stabilization corporation formed may not take definite shape yet for a good 5-- 4-- 1- -8 while, Wih crop disaster reports coming from the spring wheat belt k noithwest. The vdreat crop in Argentina and Australia is also described as dubious. With Europe likewise giving indications of a smaller wheat crop than last year. A big carry-ovof wheat at, present on hand in this country seems to-- have- - lost all terror for the gram trade, according to some of the best market experts put-Ioo- er here. Corn prices are Responsive, not only to crop losses in wheat but also to indications that the corn crop is late and spotted with commercial stocks of corn much smaller than a year ago. Oats deterioration northwest , has stimulated the buying side of the oats market! Provisions exhibit steadiness on account of much smaller stocks of lard in Chicago than a year ago and 'because of shortness of available supplies of most of the principal lines of meats. Continue Search For Missing Climber Taradiro jinn. Mount National Park, Wash., Rainier July 6 (AP) starch for the body of Forrest Greathouse of Seattle, vie, tim of a fal mto a crevasse of Ahcraham glacier which also resulted in the death of Edwin A Letzel of Milwaukee and the Injury of three '.others, was under " av on the icsr slopes of Mourn Rainier today. ww searching party was 1 Pi? Charles Browtu nark ioa thi first party winch went In search of Great-ouse. The first hunt-ondyes-- , when the party returned dIW .feport'd snow bridge nr rl roe gfj;ier were giving away. -- ed Bra-a)- lAPi G ilioiaeis of a new worlds recoid lor endurance of ilights 1 174 rested their weaned 'bodies after remaining the air iirom a week ago Inday .afternoon until . 12.39. 50 this moru-- I their nig, When they brought plane to earth at Cleveland air-- : port. They exceeded by one hour, 128 minutes and 58 seconds the mark set recently in Fort Wdrth Atfsortafcd Pir&s PJuio Tex , by Reginald Robbins and Left to right: Byron Newcomb and Royal Mitchell, pilots offle(s Kelley,32 who remained aloft1 minutes find Hours, the plane City of Cleveland, and E, E. Basham, refuel plane pilot, Jecondi who last night completed their successful attempt to establish weariness brought the airmen refueling flight record.' The plane remained in the air 171 hours to a landing and the riotous acclaim of 73,000 persons, one of and 59 seconds. whom was killed, at ter a flight which became more hazardous and difficult as the days aloft encut down their physical durance. The climax of the attempt came but a few hours before It ON ended, and the two men said it nearly killed them. They surstorm vived a (sever electrical which- - damaged -- their refueling forced landing and Salt. Lake City (AP) Bishop Sylvester Q. Canrfbn of the plane inalla other air traffic to stopped and officials Saints church of Latter the Day presiding bishopric on for the record, attained fight of rsBC have closed negotiations to broadcast nationally from 12 hours later. Exhausted, the airmen immediately were taken under guard to a hotel, to throughout the mammoth organ and choir of the Tabernacle will day if they sleep July. The desire. . ,, oe put on tne au. "We broke the record. Thats All we want now Is The organ is one of the- first large pipe instruments in the enough. sleep," Newcomb said. world and still is considered one of the best toned. Resting with them was Ernest Continued on Page 81x Pioneer Reminiscences Of The Sixties A By W. Davis McEntire young man of twenty four is SALT LAKE CITY TABERNACLE standing in an open lumber is frail ana sngnt. of figure, one perceives that he is hot yet fully inured- to the hardships of this pioneer- country though for fourteen years he has made it his home. He draws his oxen down to a walk and strains ms eyes into the distance. Some gro- -tesquely formed creature is sw?ymg down the middle of the road a few hundred yards ahead of him. What can it be? Jt might be a bufialo or even a man on horse-- 1 back, though it more resemmes some enormous bird as it hunches itself along the road, occasionally drawing some flapping appendage closer to its body. The oxen snuff apprehensively, the driver is far from being a cowardly man but as he urges his animals forward he is conscious of increased heart action and he feels a peculiar cold clamminess in his spine. But as he. 'draws closer to the creature ahead, it suddenly turns and he perceives a hugh buck Indian and with a blanket thrown loosely across his shoulders. The Indian raises ms nand hailing the traveler i nd the oxpn stop on their own accord. There is nothing to do but allow the In- -, dian to, ride and as he seats him- self with, a grunt in the back rt the wagon the young man drives on with more than one serious, misgiving. Hejias gone perhaps half at his clotlJng, and casung fur- tive glances at him. He drives- on very much disturbed and a fe, ' wa- gon. H moc-casine- 6RG1 TO BE HEARD Former Football Lundberg Makes ' Good Promise To Star Arrives For Coach Willard (Butch) Knowles of Martinez, California, is a visitor in Logan arriving here on Thursday, the day of the big Fourth of July celebration. Bute has been at the Washington State college during the past month summer traininsr under B J ... j j is ting along nicely with his work at Martinez high school where he has been employed for another season. Coach Knowles will only he must home. The trip here was return the Indian find to busily again engaged in sharpening a huge1 down the Columbia highway, viaf. knife and chuckling audibly to Boise. He will return the stacker. ern route. He is terror What shall he do? Flee? No ior he would be no match for the Rd man in the wooded land ..ur-- Two Banks Close, The Indian rounding. Fifnt? would make two of him. Suddenly Drowns the savages blanket slips fromf hig shoulders, a moment more and it falls onto the road. The Indian! sees it fall and leaps from the! Birmingham, July 6 (AP) Two wagon to recover it. Instantly the banks in the Birmingham district white man whips his cattle to a closed their doors, today, follow-lallode-- T They are young and iulljing heavy withdrawals of biood, they will show the In-- , posits attributed by officials to lian a merry chase.ll Over hiLs.lthe closing ten days ago of two livers, other banking institutions, here. through ravines The Woodiawn Savings bank they race. The white man fearing for his life and whipping his closed with the announcemeht oxen relentlessly to save it, the .that funds were not available to and its Indian panting a few rods be.-- 1 meet withdrawals purple and bellowing with fairs were turned over to the age and waving his knife which 'state banking department. gleams in the sunlight. But the1 South Side bank closed also with oxen are better fit for raclig tha the announcement that It would he Red Man, slowly the gain reopen for business ' Monday setmorning. ground and by the time the tlement is reached and th ; Indian Vincent, Ala., July 6 (AP) Dr. lcad-nA. W. Bell, president of the Wood-law- n takes to the brush they are by nearly twenty yrdi. Ho Savings bank, which closed was drives the cattle through the gate'Xs doors this morning, trmx sheer uid as they drop drowned in the Coosa river near haustion he stumbles from ir.e shortly before noon today of with a wagon and totters wearily mto the Whde swimming . ' The .body was party stockade. An hour later he not and joking wii'i his frames mediately recovered. n the fort. Such was the life in southern Idaho and northern Utah during Sunday Sermon 'he glamorous sixties. Tne young By Robber man was John Corbridge of Preston. CorE. a brother of William . Evanston, 111., July 6 (AP) The bridge of 522 North anGarfield Avenue Pocatello also Illing-e- r, early pou-- j sermon that the worth will dehvdr to his Methodist The life of Mr. Corbridge is one congregation tomorrow may not 'Ji Jor word, what the continuous successioir of Although nntx very; ister intended, on account of some crook having stolen the strong yet he possessed remarkable of endurance, whali en- - script, abled him to survive the rigors The sermon was ip the Docket which was stobo yesind dangers of frontier Jifaof and of a shirt the terday from the Illingworth autobe alive today at 87, one mostcolorfuIflgures In Hie a: - mobile. ThB-th- ief was advised by bory of Southern, Idaho. an advertisement in Thornlev in He was bom tnd-ithat he might retail, the 12, 1842 and England.-Ma- y shirt but to please return the ser, mon. Continued on Pag8x Four - j j south-nimsel- l , President p. and-sma- j al-hin- d, l - g i is'fi-igjnds- im-alki- ng Taken Rev.-Harr- ,beT-wo- jusf-Mi- re, rd mauu-oowe- j . s- Lan--ashi- .Go To Yellowstone Visit In Logan STRIKE AREA d . re, f rs To make good his promise that he will take a party of patrons of the Palais d Or to the Yellowstone National -- Park, at --ins own expense, Fred Lundberg, Logans popular dance hall manager, plans to leave in the morning for a weeks outing. Besides members of the Bluebird orchestra wno have helped' to make the Palais dOr popular, there will be upwards of twenty persons in the party. Detail plans have not as yet been worked out but in a general way, the trip will include a first nights stop at the Charles Pond resort in Island Park. The second night will find the party at or in the vicinity of Old Faithful Inn within the park. About three davs will be spent in the great national playground sight seeing and partaking of the grandeur of that wonder land. It is possible that some fishing wul be resorted ro prior to the red turn. A large ows has been to transport, the membeu of the party. It . is contemplated to take a chef along to prepare part of the meals along the way, rather than to eat at the inns and cafes enroute. We predict one of the .swellest" outings of the kind ever undertaken cut of Logan. London, July 6 iAPi Central Europe dug llrolf out today from debus of k stiiQ.s of siotms which ptUrdu vwept down from southeastern Germany and' killed 28 persons, injuring hundreds, lirCze- - I'io'o F. During Two Nights And Day Of Wild Disorder Esti$50,000 mated At AV ait For Union And Owners To Agree. k f. hoslovukia, Austria, Jugoslavia, Germany and Switzerland. The storms, which af times reached hurncane intensity, did widespiead damage. destroying growing crops in some districts, tearing down telegraph- and telephone wires and interrupting railroad traffic. The disturbances began m Germany as hail storms, tore down through Bohemia and Moravia and swung eastward into Austria, where they raked the republics length and breadth. Here the disturbance divided, one section sweeping south through Jugoslavia and another continuing westward into Switzerland. persons were killed at Zen- The! wjen ,Tr5, Jugoslavia, when the river ASS Rosna, whipped by the tornado, flooded a cottage in which a number of terrified peasants heel sought shelter. Seven persons were And killed in Bohemia and Moravia, and ten more in Austria. - SPAIN TO BE Plan Presented To Spanish National Contains sembly Eleven Sections 104 Articles Power To Be Vested in King. Maintains High Madrid, Spain, Jmy 6 lAP) A projected new constitution ior the Spanish Monarchy nas been presented to the Spanish National assembly. The pi oject, contains 11 sections and 104 articles, detailing various concepts ot the nation, state, reIndividual ligion, nationality. rights, and monareny and succes. sion to the throne. 0 Paris, July 8 (AP) Reestablishment of tne elective Cortes, or Spanish parliament, Is provided for by the projected new Spanish constitution, submitted the national assembly lor plenary action m October, the text of which has become known nere: The projected constitution would establish Spain as a constitutional monarchy with the executive power vested in the king, with the ministry to nave arbitrary consult ative power. The legislation power will reveit the Cortes, a single body containing one member of every of population, both sexes atrng available for membership and roi enumeration for representation. One half of the Cortes will be elected by universal suffrage,- - 30 members appointed by royal decree and tne rest elected by special classifications or professions as laws later enacted may establish The king, under the, new co,nti-tutioprofiting by the ao ice of. his ministers, will initiate all law3 except those referring to eminent expenditures, which ha: e' previously received the approt al' l one fifth the deputies. There is an express guarantee "no one shall be molested in Spanish territories because of his le- Continued on Page Three - Damage I i - CHAIN - esn Twice mayor of New York, John Hylan has his hat in the ring Mayor igain, ambitious to defeat James Walker. Hylan is the nominee of the Better City Government league and the republican nomination will be sought for him. Hours and 59 seconds, pilots Roy 4L Mitchell and Byron K. water near Castle Geyser in the FaRh-iu- l' vicinity of the famous Qld geyser in Yellowstone Park, George Landoy, editor of Matin, J3i ussels, Belgiujn, died xrom his burns. Tlie accident occurred late Wednesday, Landoy died at the Mammoth Hot Springs hotel yesterday aicernoon. The European newspaper editor, who was a member of the Carnegie tour of European journalists, nad slipped into tne pool of steaming water when he stepped back to obtain a better view of the geyser's eruption. He managed to pull himself out of the hot pool and was given first aid immediately at Old Faithful lodge by Dr. u. A. Horner of Chicago- to Mammoth Brought pot Springs, Landoy was pronounced to be in a critical condition, and doctor? worked unceasingly but Huitlessly to relieve his pain ani save his life. . Surviving him are his brother, Eugene, and his mother, both of Brussels. Ohio, July (ToveLuid, Mammoth Hot Springs, Yellowstone Park, Wyo., July 6 (AP)-L- ess hours after he had thaa-4- 8 dipped accidently mto a hot hole of Hundreds Injured. xCrops Destroyed, Telephone And Telegraph Wires T o r n 1) o y n, Railroad Traffic Re- 100,-1)- 00 n, Speed To Win ' Airplane Race London, July 6 (AP) FlightLie-utenaAtcherley, member of .the British Schneider cup team, won the kings cup ait race today in the 1,169 mile flight around Britain, The race started from West-oair park yesterday morning, with. 41 airplanes taking off. They represented all types of machines and the contestants included three nt v women. ' 4 "" The first section qf the flight Was over a course of 589 miles, to Blackpool, where 29 pilots mhrie a successful landing last night The start over the second leg on the return to Hestdn airdrome was madte early this morning. Tno three women were still in the contest. Lieutenant R. L. Atcherley main-l- a ined an average speed of 150 an hour. On landing at Blackpool last night his machine struck a rut and part of the tail was torn away. It was only by frantic efforts that mechanics got the plane ready for the start of the final half of the journey. Miss E. W. Spooner finished fifth in the field of 41 original starters. u July 6 (AP) After two nights and a day of wild disorder striking street carmenand their sympathizers Walsh Speaks On rested today while representatives of the company and union Relief Question sought to fmd a common ground for negotiation. Bozeman, Mont., July 6 (AP) which - swept The disorders While he said the farm relief meaof all yesstreet through Canal sure passed bv congress would interday and spread into other crease the price of wheat i or b sections continued mto the night, mts. United States Senator resulted in the burning of five J. Walsh speaking before Thomas street cars, the throwing of Second a group of farmers and business Poland barn into the dynamite men hefe yesterday, declared that and setting fire to the Claiborne even the strongest supporters of Avenue street car bridge. . At The Blast the bill did not expect it to inwas While property damage crease the purchasing powerof the estimated at $50,000, last (nights of dollar to' its level Bureau troubles brought a minimum of Powder Company farmers days two strikSo far human injury. .Senator Walsh explained in deers have been killed, one shot tail the proposed working of the ' Submits 6 (AP) and Salt Lake City, July through the .shoulder He asserted the debenture measure. hundreds hurt by flying bricks, Fear of another explosion in the plan, which failed to pass, would of Hercules the sticks and splintering glass. powder plant brought farmers 20 cents a Plan The quiet, of today was at- - company, Utah near here, was halt-th- e have more for their wheat. bushel the for to search ing- the today tributed mainly fatigue, in killed rioters having worn themselves bodies of three workmen .Salt Lake City, July 6 (?) De- out by the blast yesterday, Production Of long hours of fighting) a dynamite presunder claring that farmers, the operation of cars, company officials, announced. against are ent taxation conditions, Police . continued . ta maintain The bodies of two of the men, to pav taxes from capital heavy guards around the Shafer and .Eugene Ek, rather than from income. Miss panys property. who were working inside the Salt Lake City, July 6 (AP) An Edna Rosenkranb, secretary of Hot heads among the strike (building where the explosion increase of 32 percent in the last Utah State Farm Bureau, to- - sympathizers were said to have burred, were blown to bits, along six months over the same period day submitted a proposed plan of jbeen ail set at midnight to de- - with tire build mg James Williard last year was shown in Utah Egg revision to the state revision com- -j uver a' "mass attack against im- - Jenkins, the other man killed, prodBction, it was announced tocarmen but the was believed to have been out- - day by O. C. Edmonds, general mission. (ported She suggests a tax on all sources special train which bf ought them ide the building at the time of manager of the Utah Poultry of earned income, a tax on in-- 1 in was shunted about on sidings he blast. associ ation. The Shafer was to charge of the Approximately 180,000. come from all forms of property, until trace of it was' lost. casc3 a land tax of not to exceed 5 or 6 operators, brought in from the Mix house. Ek and Jenkins had have been handled by the associadepart-lantion so far this year, as compared per cent of the income from the least and branded by union lead-- i been assigned to that ment for the day, to take the with 135,179 at the same time last a gasoline tax, a business 'ers as professional totthe place of two absent employes. ers,. were held today on tax and an inheritance tax. year. Production last month aled nearly 30,020 cases.- - She urges stringent penalties in special train outside the city. Vexed at losing the enforcement of tax collection and Dies attacked the an . economical administration of carmen, the crowd in To Cudahy the bam . early .Canal stteet Anaconda. state affairs. " and after hours of the morning Weds stoning the buildings and park6 (AP) . July Mont Anaconda, ed street cars, started the fire. Riverside. . Cal July '6 CAP) day scout The police sought vainly to tbreak Michael Regan 84. earlv Called died here yes- Michael John Patrick Cudahy. 21, and Indian fighter, tear with crowds gas the up terday. Regan was bom in Ireland heir to the Cudahy Packing forbombs but they would only and came to this country as a boy. tune, and Muriel Avel Evansen, 18 WJterjLnd then reassemble. awhose- - Moving H. Hadlock,' st&te bank examiner, picture., name, is to prevent-dvntried Firemen fought Indians In the Muriel Evans, were married today todav issued a- tall - for . quarterly mite thrown into the Poland barn He h: bv justice cf tUio Dakotas and Montana. reports reports and comptrollers ; lived in Anaconda for 35 years. Continued on Page Three . . of 85 state batiks in Utaji. Figjmi. New Orleans, I -- char-teie- Farm . Fear -- Farm pre-w- ar Secretary Tax i - com-npu- h Utah Eggs Increases ed com-Oliv- er 5 oc-t- non-uni- he on i Pro-tonce- rs' d. strike-break- -1 - . out-of-to- Quarterly Bank Reports Salt-Lake-- Pioneer In Montana Heir Fortune . For City. After'thfr-iivil-war-he-joine.d.th- e - Lc-u-r- v i: |