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Show imunmii rTTTMTT?!;T??7! f ?? - f f- j' - j jr i ejou MAV WHEAT Open Hitch lawr' 11 $1.11! -- - $1,11 $i.t)8 $1.08 Hum VOLUME LIII. LEGGE TASK UTAH, TUES1) LOGAN, CACHE COUNTY, TIN TO artists Indian women held in death of, 01 SEN. Mostly fair tonight and IT AH: rclmsulay : somewhat, cooler ia vrekt port in toonight. IDAHO: Fair tonight and Weduw-dalight local frosts iq the north. W y; wife Organize Company For Transatlantic Airship Service " v- Chairman - of Farm Hoard Hu- Criticized in Senate by Idahoan for his Statement Concern- At f TN , Dr. Hugo Eckener, Com- ' t VV' h - ing Export Debenture , mander of the March', Washington, Chairman of 25 (AP.I I farm board was taken to task in the senate today by Senator Borah of Idaho for his statement yesterday- contending the export debenture plan was unworkable, the Idahoan remarking that Leg-g- e would do better to demonstrate hi3 fitness to deal with the farm situation before undertaking to advise congress regarding legislation. Borahs- the of export debenture principle farm relief, which is opposed by President Hoover, the placed Legge statement in the congressional record. Alongside it he placed a statement by Alexander Hamilton on the protective tariff, with apologies to Mr. Hamil ton. Legge, tire L - bring city 'V more people . to than ever before history, Sunday, April Salt in according to Lake N. Associated I'res i io(o of Mrs. Clothilda Marchand Y, to 6 Throngs at the conference are anticipated to be so iarge that admission to the priesthood meet ing at ten oclock Sunday morning, and also to the pageant, The Message of the Ages, which will be presented nightly beginning April 6th at eight oclock, will be by tickets only, church Members may sestate. cure tickets from their bishop or their stake president without .charge. It As, asserted. further that Reports indicate within the next few days The Mormon Century Book, which is of issued in commemoration Mormonisms hundredth birthday, will be distributed throughout the membership of the church and elsewere as a means of stimulatinterest ing local and national in what a century of Mormonism This publihas accomplished. cation will contain feature articles by church leaders and other important writers of our western country, it Is stated. Americans Guests Of King and Queen ) Amer London7March ican delegates to the naval conference and their wjves, with the leaders of other delegations, were among the 200 guests who attend ed the. .royal afternoon party at Buckingham palace today. The party was the first of its queen type .given by the king and. mornsince ,1928. .King George In ing clothes and Queen Mary wearing an afternoon town stood at the entrance to the picture gallery they reached son carpeted their names by the Lord the top of the crim grand staircase after had been announced Chamberlain. This was the only ceremonial and the party afterward took on an informal nature, the king and queen strolling among the guests The companies interested in project include the National City Dank, the United Alrcrait and k..M Transport corporation, the Union Carbide company, the Aluminum Mary Coleman, of Springfield, company ot American, and the III, wae chosen queen of the UniGoodyear Zepptiin corporation ot versity of Wisconsin military ball. distinguished Bowen Police to have eonfced ehe Incited he brought about the slay confe.ted said the Police wifo. aVti.ta to the Indian equaw, elay (center), Ing because of unrequited love for the artist. Lmryim.r.ors.neT.Tn.V TO- - - County-Commissione- rs Willing to Employ Expert to Assist E. O. Heinrich, Employed at Expense of Dr. Moormeister; . Salt Lake City, March 25 (AP) commiswillingcrimin- The board of county sioners today voiced its ness to employ another ologist besides E. O. Heinrich of Berkeley, Cal., to aid in the soluhere last tion of the murder r. month of Mrs. Dorothy J Moor-meiste- - Commissioner B. F. Quinn, who announced the boards attitude, said it was prompted ,by criticism that has reached the commission about the arrangement whereby Dr. Frank Moormeister, husband of thedead woman, will pay Heinrich for his services. We have signified our willingness to provide any help the sheriff thinks he needs. In addition to the criminologist hlnid by Dr. Moormeister, Commissioner Quinn said. The commission VbeliC ves the of county owes it to Salt Lake to get a man not hlrtfi by an individual, a; but by the county itself, to assure the people of security under the law. If anyone is hired, he should be clearly independent of any person with a personal interest in the case. He should work directly under the county officials. Besides - the Moormeister- - ease-- , Commissioner Quinn mentioned the June Nelson murder case and the case of Max Beaver, late city treasurer found dead under mysterious Circumstances after an uo panunuoo anoj Negotiating To Ottawa, WOlffll 25 Pre (AP) King' an- nounced In- the house of commons yesterday that Canada Is ' with the negotiating States for a treaty to suppress smuggling. He said the object of the treaty was not only to stop liquor traffic but was designed to prevent smuggling of all kinds of merchandise both ways across tho border. The announcement was made in the course of the debate on the amendment to the export bill Introduced by Mr. King for the purpose of denying customs clearances to ' craft carrying liquor to the United States. The measure has passed its second reading. Mussolini Signs s' tne-'peo- March W. L. Mackenzie . Marriage Papers Rome, March 25 (AP) Premier Mussolini today in the course f an intimate ceremony at Willa Torlonia formally signed the legal papers, of request. for the . marriage of his daughter,.. Ed da, to Count Galle-azz- o Clano. ed .The-Ban- ns ...will bepublished next Sunday, remaining exposed until April 6, but the wedding probably will "not . occur until April 24. It probably will be held in Rome In a private chapel .at the Villa Torlonia with the utmost privacy. PliEPlETO Resulting in the instantaneous death from a crushed head to William- Hams, 48, Fairview, Idaho, an automobiie crash oecured Sunday evening at 9 oclock about two miles soutli oi Preston. The machine driven by Harris and proa ceeding south collided with truck driven by Peter J. Hansen, nephew ot Mri Harris and occupied by Mri. Hansen and their cousin and Vern Monsen, another nephew of Mr, Harris. Mr. Harris was a widower, his wife having been killed also in an accident about five years ago when the horse which She was driving became frightened and threw her from the carriage. ' The accident cahio when Harris attempted to turn out for the truck, a beet rack with protuding Continued on Page Four Patrolman Shot Orange, Tex, Maich 25 (AP) White, patrolman here, was shot to death today in a difficulty with N. E. Perkins, former Texas ranger and Perkins and his wife agent. were charged with murder. to repoits to police, vhite was6shot when he, in with. Leonard Carr, police man, went to Perkins store to insome loud talking vestigate there. , White was 49 years old, lie is survived by a widow and four children,, com-thejpa- Invalids In . Gandhis Camp 25,4APi-Jhe- re Bombay, India, are 18 March invalids alio are among the following Mahatma Gandhi from il Armadabad to the sea at "J devotees Jalal--wr- "10TH AH11IVERSARY OF SUFFRAGE " Vote for Women, Buttons and Banners Being Sought For Tomorrow's FeTivities - IIIIMM - Motorcycle Mishap ! ' Death By Bess FUrman, (Associated Press Staff Writer) March 25 (AP) : Washington, Twin Falls, March 25 (AP) Old trunks were being rummaged Verd 28 T. Sorenson. Sweeps Through for year old votes for women - buttons automobile mechanic, died here and banners throughout the Unit- last from Injuries received States today as members of Marchnight 14 when his motorcycle Apartment Building ed the National league pf away with him and crashed voters prepared for an automobile parked near ' Odry. Ind., March 25 fAP countrywide celebration' of . ten1 Into a repair shop where he was emone man was killed, another ds years of suffrage. From 42 states have come tele- - ployed. mission and a third was Injured The motorcycle got out of con- a perhaps f ataify during throttle stuckr and 18- fashion , which swept ceremonies, through suffrage , the P standing car, souold today, and and apartment building early street parades photo the Venier shows to brighten driving 100 persons to the An during a blinding snowstorm. col- nineteenth amendments tenth J ?operation wasj?erformed at a birthday, party:- -" One wall of the building and Sorenson ap- of lapsed. carrying with It an uni- Louls! yellow umbrellas the yellow straw hats dentified man who was killed when he suffered a re-His, Chicago, flaunted at. conventions ,?aturday Carl Smith, 65, is missing. inlong past, were reported out from son, Carl E. Smith. 25. was Sorenson came here two ready to ago front Paris, Idaho, and Isyears Jured probably fatally in a futile a decade of storage, surblue with the and save his father. again to gleam attempt vived bv his widow and his mothat valued was The building er who came from Paris last week. (Continued on Page Eight) $150,000 and was a total loss.' and chatting Fire tanmliv 4iregfamg-escribing-candl-Jightin- g- oIlS?" Results in terminal. Neither Dr. Eckener nor Charles E. Mitchell, chairman of the National City bank, with whom1 he conferred before making his would says when announcement, the trans-Atlantservice would be begum Dr. Eckener who has made six crossings of the Atlantic in the Graf Zeppelin and trip around the world plans to return to Germany April 15 to resume supervision of the construction of a new- - hangar and-- , plant - at Friedrichshafen which he described' as large enough to build any airship the future may need. ic Prince of Wales May Visit U. S. 25 Santa Rosa, Cal., March V. M. Carruthers. Sonoma county rancher, said here today he had been informed that the Prince of Wales 'expected to visit his ranch in Western Canada and that the heir to the British throne probably would visit-- central California during August. Carruthers, who has a herd of cattle from the prince's stock farms, said he expected Wales to visit his Sonoma county ranch and then go to San Francisco, remaining there a short time and then continuing to Detroit and New York. Mr. Carruthers, who owns the Kenwood farms, ten miles from here, is a cousin of L M.. Carlyle, Canadian manager ofe- the -princes ranch H- said his - information (AP) To Death in Texas ' Broachv CELEBRATE She it a junior that airships mamrfae ture salt in dcliance of the Irf the university. - Denver, March 25 (AP) Testimony on the Denver and Rio Grande Western railroads, application for authority to purchase the Denver and Salt Lake railroad was practically completed before an Interstate commerce examiner here today as attempts were made to prove intent on the part of the former road to close the western gateway Into the Uintah Basin. Utah, jh Albert fVsSt) attorney fori western 'Colorado and 'Uintah'' basin interests..,. annouiu:d-at-tha-no- on recess that-Gera- td Hughes,-on- e of the heaviest stockholders In . the D. & S. L., would be called-t- o the witness stand this after- noon In an. effort to prove that the D. & R. G. W Intended to forestall extentsion of D. & S. I.., rails westward from Craig, Colo. Vogl Vanguard Troop 108 Has Overnight Meets Instant Will ple said larger than the Graf Zeppeun ana more than twice the size of me United States navy dirigible Los Angeles will be buUt in both the United States and Germany Death in Crash tor the service.' He said he favored Seville, Spain, as a site for the European William Harris Fatally Crushed airport for the dirigibles and some point near Baltimore Crashes Automobile or When further south for the American With Truck - Prevent Smuggling mler Akron, O. Dr. Eckener Fairview Man F- Hoard of - ic pre-parat- ory with murder In Buffalo, Two Indian women were charged con-feien- ce . 7t &'' i the church officials, and preparations are under way to entertain in visitors every way possible the wiio trek to the Mormon capital in time for the opening meeting ; i Criminologist May hys Plans to Observe Be Engaged in the Centennial Year Utah Murder Case of 100th anniversary L. D. S. church Is expected New York, March 25 (AP) Dr. Hugo Eckener. commander of tne Graf ctmgib.e Zeppelin, today, that witn the ot of large a group backing and oamting concerns, organization of the International Zeppelin Transport company for airship seivice has been ctiected. lie said shat tire capital had been fully subscribed and that by. tne end of the year studies to actual operation Uaus-Atlant- 3 J.VC..S D. S. Church The tempt Being Made to Western The into Uintah Gateway Basin, Utah.- -' Close ed 'V whh - Dirigi- makes Announcement Hacked by Large Concerns. IMan. Party in Canyon Leaders and Vanguards of Troop camping trip of the season In Logan canyon, Friday afternoon. motored A party of twenty-thre- e to Wildwood' canyon, home of Nils P. Anderson and there participat' ed in an enjoyable time. After gratifying the appetite that the canyon climate produces several of the Vanguards were Initiated, and howl Executive Saturday morning. Pond drove" up for a short visit One group of hikers then went up the mountains In quest of deer while the other Journed to the Scout camp. Near the top of the ridge North of the Scout camp was found signs of nature's survival of the Here was found a dead fittest. deer which appeared to have been before killed but a short time Its back was broken discovery. and its neck showed the marks ol From the signs It sharp teeth. was thought that a cougar was responsible for the killing. Numerous deer were seen and many The fine horns' were found. troop members arrived home In the early evening of Saturday, eager and planning for more trips. -- I Pleads Guilty to Embezzlement Charge Denver, March 25 (AP) Carey former assistant cashier of the defunct First National B. Adams, bankof Delta, Colo., pleaded guilty in federal court here today to Indictments charging embezzlement of the banks funds and making false entries. - Adams was arrested at New Orleans March 3, rcgaraing'TKe prTnce was"obtalh-c- d af was sentenced to four from his cousin. One of the things the prince years and six months on eah of plans to do, Carruthers said. Is two counts, the sentences to run study labor conditions In Amer- - i concurrently, and wgs fined $500 on a third count. jca COifSIDER scarch-.-Adam- ADJOURiilNG GOtiFEREKCE intimated that Hughes had placed himeslf on record In a previous hearing before the Interstate commerce commission, that In which permission to construct the Dotsero cutoff was sought to the effect that the D. & R. G. ,W., had made overtures for definitely closing the question Continued on Page Four lt3 enjoyed their first overnight FOR SiX s NAVAL White i J Frags Olsen Farewell Evokes Laughter White Wings, Philip Bar somewhat radical and amif departure from the aonventiwjai in the theatre, gave the Morqitx Olsen players their opportunity to say farewell, this season to the Logan audience which for seven years has consistently Invited them to come again each season. This four act comedy,' lightly depleting human natures way of stubbornly resisting the- - new before succumbing to the spirit of progress and relinquishing the was Chookful Of amusing situations. The will filled house at the Capitol last evening, comprising Utah Agricultural stucollege dents and faculty, and Cache valley playgoers, was a distinct tribute to the Moroni Olsen players. The audience was happy once more to welcome home own Leora Thatcher, who Logans In the role of Mrs. Fanny Inch, haughty and proud of her White Wing family, carried herself wittr credit and ea$ through a somewhat exacting character role. Janet Young as Mary Todd, sported a saucy air of modernity and restlessness that made the onlookers smile with favor once more on her unquestionably gifted artistry. Moroni Olsen, Byron Foulger, and Gordon Nelson, with the others in the cast supporting -.em 'm'Iight fully made' Oieir roles of Herbert, the Cabby, (Mr. Qlseru ; Ernest Inch, (Mr. Folger); and Archie Inch, (Mr. Nelson), gleshly and freshly real. Old, Missing Flier MOtITHS Brit- ish 'monopoly. Gandlu, leaving Samni for Tra-ls- a today, left general directions to be followed, and asked that prayers be said for the safety of his party. Seventeen of the 18 sick ones had to be conveyed here in advance. , One was left behind at Anand. I Attempts Made To Prove There Is An At- Queen Co-E- d (iraf Zeppelin, ble . ' NUMBER 70 MARCH 23, 1930.c f $. 4 If IB , WEATHEI Lander, Wyo., March 25 Hale, Walnut Creek, CaP) flier, missing since Friday when he left Cheyenne by airplane, has been at the Fascimelle ranch, ten miles northeast of here, since Friday nighk Buffeted Joy a strong head wind after leaving Cheyenne last Friday morning. Hale said he-- got off the air route and confused the Burlington railroad tracks hortn with the Union. Pacific tracks ld Idpa of Suspension Was To Give Strive to Raise France and Italy Ppportunity To Compromise Price of Silver -- March 25 (AP) Adjournment of the naval conference for six months as a, means Spokane, Wash., March 25 (AP)' of escaping the present impasse in conditions that Suggesting was definitely considered can be lm at thebeing conference today. A the silver industry oven -. iproved by producers, taking, The suggestion for such an ad- - west. the manufacture of large qu&n- - jjurnment to was attributed Hale said he passed over Casper, tUies of solid silver plate to bejForeign Minister Grani of Italy marketed at a low price F. Cush- - artd was made to Prlme Minister but did not know what town it was. He followed the northwestIng Moore, president of the north-- 1 MacDonald west mining association yesterday ldea wa3 that this suspen- - ern railroad tracks which took xhe named a silver committee toslon wouid give France and Italy ihltn hi to central Wyoming. Eighty President Ileber J.' Grant will strive for higher prices. jja further opportunity of com- - Phl wasnorth of Casper, at Monets, mid address the Ju Tlve. committee. jgill be support forced to. land because of presell without jhe Hiffwnitipg A. seinS. t'. students of l!e I. ed in Its work by the silver pro prolonging niAgnettrtrcraKer virtual the' present School ducers association. President W suspension of the conference. Inary at (be Hunday Afteq temporarily adjusting the session beginning t 10:30 a. ni. Mont Ferry of Salt Lake City, In The adjournmant would con- trouble Hale again took off but ac30, March v. Sunday morning, formed the northwest organiza-tloi- template reassembling of the con- -. engine trouble necessitated anference on Oct. 1, thus giving an other landing, this time late Friinstitution. of the J superintendent Members the committee are opporuntlty for a possible agree-Jam- es day on the Fascimelle ranch, ten for not is designed, address The miles from here. F. Wallace, 'mnt before Christmas. McCarthy, the students only as the public is llale said he had J. C. Elton, Salt Lake, Idaho;suggestion is now under Since Friday, on invited to he present at the his plane, but City; John Sawbridge, Yakima, advisement but it was said inibeen working senirel. They will he eondurted M Smith, Spokane; authoritative he needed parts for the finding conference circles in the assembly hall of the in-i- . Wash.; Frank ILZ T- .- . . 'motor,, he drove into Lander late - Charles Butter, San Frencisco and -- slilucimt. Dr. Francis Thomas, Butte, Mont. (Continued on Page Eight) yesterday. t President London, Grant . . I i xis I 4 it n |