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Show "...;imnnmniinniiiinmnmMnmmuMMniuii WHEAT Wlk-at- r SP Her Mar May Opeu .. 83 4 89 2 .9396 2 - 8 ifrrsj QUOTATIONS 86 93 96 99 High 8 8 3-- 8 Law 83 88 Close 3--8 851-- 3--8 90 4 94 5 8 97 2 921-- 2 93 4 WEATHER 4 8 I TAII: Unsettled tonlglii and Sunday; slightly eooler tonight. IDAHO: Unsettled with showers tonight and Sunday, eooler. Qri VOLUME LIIL NAVY LOGAN, CACHE COUNTY, UTAH, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER OF ARGENTINE T JOINS i 6, 1930. NUMBER 210. BANDITS OBTAIN NURNICAIIE LEAVES SOON TO PRESIDE OVER GERMAN-AUSTRI4L. D.S. MISSION DAMAGE ABOUT An Officer of the Air Hurt Rescuing Dog - Service was. Shot Down and Killed for Join Refusing to Revolutionary Supervisor of Idaho .National Forest, Unem- - Lewiston, Idaho,- - Sept., 6 (P) rRour thousand .acres "of timber. land were ablaze in the north central Idaho region to- St. Joe national forest, said were set by unemployed men seeking work. The only blaze out of control was one covering 1,000 Acres In the Selway national forest on Settlers creek, which was roaring through valuable red fir and cedar pole timber. Three hundred men were fighting it A 2,000 acre; fire was burning in the St. Joe forest near Clar-kibut 300 fighters expected to have it controlled by 'tonight blazes' Myrick The man-s- et said, were mot giving concern and it was believed they would be checked without great diffihad. beep culty. No arrests made. Cool weather and relatively aiding high humidity were fighters in their, effort .to check the remaining forest fires in Oregon. Virtually all fires control under were brought yesterday but two blazes stiH were considered serious. Two hundred men were fighting a fire in the Willow creek district near Butte Falls In the vicinity of Medford. The fire had burned 3500 acres of timber and brush. A stiff breeze fanned the fire yesterday. Fifty men were fighting-thfire on Shively creek, a tributary of the south Umpqua, near Roseburg. The 'fire was reported to have covered a ltfrge area. Both flresf were believed of incendiary origin, ' Nine free lectures on BioThe new department of the chemistry, Health and Practical Shirley Mae store received fav- Psychology will be given in Lo- -' orable comments from the Sat- gan commencing September 11 urday shoppers. I. Shadduck, Dr. Ralph Manager Hyrum Arnold has by just completed a large ' coat eminent lecturer, author and; The lectures will department at the rear of the shop. The new addition is 50 be delivered on the evenings of feet deep and 16 feet wide. The 1 17 walls are done in the most September i, 12, 13, 15, 16, 19 and 20 on the mezzanine attractive celotex patterns and 18, with delicately patterned lino-- floor of the Hotel Eccles at leum gives a covering conform- - j 8 oclock. Titles of these various lectures ing to the lighting effects of are as follows: September 11, the pew department. Recently , Mrs, Mae Musssr, A Non Mormons Interpreta; a member of the firm, returned tion of the Word of Wisdom; Honor Comes ; -How One 12, from California with some of September the latest decorative schemes Thousand Utah People . Cured which havb been incorporated Themselves .Through : Cache Musician in the improvements. New coat etc.; September 13, "PreOld enabled venting hanging equipment has Age;, September the Miss Lu Dean Rogers is leav The Sermon on Mr. Arnold to show his fall 15, received Mount: September 16, Nerves, ing Saturday recently merchandise, for Cincinnati, from - Eastern and Californian etc.; September T7, Beauty Ohio where she has been given of to markets Diet and the Psychology good advantage. a scholarship to study piano During the past year this Charm" September 18, Chem- under Madam Marguerite Melmarked made lias ical Types of People; Septem- ville Liszniewska, noted concert institution improvements in the store and ber 19, ' Curing Exhaustion, pianist ' and teacher. now present an appearance Anemia, Low Vitality Through Miss Rogars will act as a which brings favorable publicity Food September teacher and accompanist at Chemistry; to of visitors Chief Cause from 20, Acidity, the Logan. coming the Cincinnati conservatory qf Human Ailments. music. ) delivered Dr .Shadduck has Lu Dean has previously relectures on turned from. a years hundred several of Flashes Of Life and health in piano in Europe. She isstudy a gradSalt Lake City and Ogden. uate of the U. S. A. C. and a Over the United States in the former pupil of Prof. S. E. Clark. By The Associated Press past few years he has given New York A book by Pres- over 1,200 lectures on these to is on ident Hoover fishing Golf Course Ready subjects. Followers of Ur, Shadducks be published shortly. It will .11 for $7 and 990 copies will work number close to 100,000 in be printed. It contains two the United States More than For Big Tourney Utahns' have speeches in 50 pages. One was contact with of come in .direct made when as secretary commerce he accepted the him and his lectures. The Tom Thumb golf course of Walton the Izaak Dr. Shadduck is a graduate has been put in 'first class con- presidency addwas McFaddens an of Bemarr College clition for the free for all toum-o- f league: the other ress to the people of Virginia Drugless Healing, the Na-- 1' ament which starts this evening summer his college of at six oclock. camp. tional inspired bv New York Which is more Medicine and Surgery and oft Everything necessary for the strenuous, big league baseball the American college, of Physio- - convenience and pleasure of the or selling goods in a mens therapy, all of Chicago; and entries has been done by the shop? Babe Ruth knows. .He spent four years in management. sold things at the opening of try under V. G. Rocine, ChiThis is the first tournament his Broadway store for hats, cago. He is a licensed practi- to be held at the Tom Thumb Will states of such tioner in the things. Oregon course since lte establishment pajamas and he be on hand in the winter? end Hlinois. Doctors from all during the middle of the preSure. But not all the time parts of the union have attend- sent summer. It would kill me. ed post graduate work given by Both ladies and gentlemen are New York Belmont park has Dr. Shadduck. in Chicago. invited to participate in the hired a specialist to prevent tournament. weeks Special ram with a radio machine. It prizes are now on exhibition will collect from G. A. I. M. Providence Boy in the Cardon Jewelry windows evaY for $1,000 Sykes weekday and will be awarded to Cache and .$2,000 for every Saturday best golfers. Wins First Ton valleys that rain drenches the park. The tournament will not inIf It Is pleasant Sykes will col- -' terfere with those who wish to lect what he will pay If it rains. play golf and who do not dein Litter secret some has apparSykes County sire- to enter the tourney. atus, which he claims will preThe schedule for play has vent rain or bring it. The park ' been so carefully marked out is doubtful, but - will take a Ray Zollinger, Providence, that the Tom Thumb people who is a Future Farmer under . chance as insurance. of Hr P. And- attention to the casual player Bristol, England Loquacious the supervision teacher at as to the tourney players. woman ' begins young. Professor erson, Smith-Hughe- s C. W. Vailentine. psychologist South Cache high school, is of the University of Science, te first boy in Cache county to Miss Alta Hirst entertained produce a- - ton litter of pigs, at a bridge luncheon on Friday Mr. Zollinger entered the con- - at her home in compliment to any" definite meaning for them. test with a group of other boy3 Ktoude" MlelTa'a His pigs were bride. Fall flowers were ming And I have to report that I (last spring. used have noticed this more decid-- , weighed at seven days of age as decoration,?. Luncheon was in-i- n been at weighed edlv in Thy two little girls toanianij have served to sixteen. Miss Dorothy ' the bovs. jtervals- throughout the season. Wakeley was awarded high the 180th day after birtn scofe prize and Miss McClellan Washington Baron Von Steu-O- n 'the height pigs weighed 2,065 received a beautiful guest prize. ben is to be oh a two-cen-t stamp. It will be a special pounds. The largest one weigh, The Misses Lluella. Hoff and issue in commemoration of the.pd 291 pounds and the smallest Thelma Steffenhagen entertain200th anniversary of the birth' one 218.5 pounds. A detailed ed at a 500 party .Thursday of the revolutionary war hero, report on cost will be published evening- - Gladioli formed the later. Luncheon was centerpiece. i The results of the first ton lit- - served Annual Election to four couples. The American Legion and ter indicate that pigs can be the auxiliary, will meet next grown a good size and are eco- - Mrs. Taiitha Smith left this Friday, September 13, for the omical at present prices in this morning for St. Anthony Wed- purpose of holding the annual, valley. R. L. Wrlgley, county .nesday where she will spend election of officers. agent, weighed the pigs at toe the winter ' beginning and at the close of I The Wisconsin state fair h? the contest. Toll bridges paid $18,072 Into been an annual event for 80 ,,laor,H0viercriSTi,tht m11 of,the state treasury years. Zollinger, ggg during July. e 1 to -- nd Post-Gradu- is- ' . i ' Unfit to. Drink, By Retie Lepervanche, Associated Press correspondent. (Cop right 1930 and all rights reserved by The Associated Sept. 6 (AP) Press. -- a, On Health Here 111., PRESIDENT OLIVER HYER BUDGE today by four young robbers, two of whom wore handker chief masks. Whitney is presKraft-Pheni- x ident of the cheese company. The party had attended the theatre in Chicago, ahd were dropping one of the guests, Mrs Gladys S. Mehan, at her home when the Whitney car was crowded to the curb by the robbers machine. Rings, bracelets and1 necklace yere stripped from their wearera quickly at the point of the revolvers. The ban&itsca: disappeared into the darkness toward Chicago before the alarm could be given. Mrs. Whitney .reported her personal loss was $125,000 including a ring valued at $50,000. Mrs. Whitney was the immedlate objective of the robbers when they surprised the party. One of the bandits started to tear her ornaments from her (until she cried, "Ill give you everything if you wont harm Then they allowed her to jus. hand over the valuables. The bandits also demanded the keys of the Whitney car, which they carried off with them to prevent further pursuit. , PRESIDENT .UNO MRS. 0. II. BUDGE SAIL SEPTEMBER OVER GERill-AUSTRI- 24 I TO PRESIDE MISSION MI Farewell Program in Tabernacle Monday Evening to Honor Retiring Stake Head HT I And Family Career of Church and Civic lif. t. ii. JCI1S 611 Leader Active One. Addresses City President and Mrs. Oliver 11. Budge of Logan stake will be honored in the Logan tabef nhcle-- onday evening, September 8, at 8 oclock by members of. bbth the Logan and Cache School Teachers ..stakes in a farewell! Jrograhf prior to their departure for the n mission M the L. D. S. church over which extent .pf $loo,ooot or more in President. Budge has' been called, ,ti preside, President E. P. Kimball, former Salt Lake tabernacle orgaiJ SSSSSS to ist who 1$ returning after several years spent as head of the Utah constitution are mission. fried, Dr. C. N. Jensen, state r family, president1 ym'T,1 and Salt Lake City September 16, going in addressing the teachers, first .to Chicago where they will visit for a few days with Principals and supervisors of their son and daughter-in-laDr. and Mrs. O. Wendell tute IldFricteV monSnJat He .is ,servLin? a medical .Budge. interneship at St. Lukes lo oclock at the girls camp in Hospital, Chicago, following his graduation from North- - Spring Hollow, Logan canyon, western university medical school. The family will Future of School Work in also make a stop at Buffalo N. Y. They,Budge will sail from New theme Sri Headquarters Dr Jensens address. If Amerfa,dlft to Hamburg. R n mission Dr. Wallace J. Vickers, be Konigsburgherstrasse 62, Dresden, Germany., soclate professor of English at It is almost 34 years since President Budge, at the age the utah State Agricultural of 31, left on a mission to Europe, being assigned to labor in SgjSgz He which4thefl. comprised territory e reSSbiUty of now forming part of the the Swiss-Gethe every teacher regarding man, and the French mission of today. lie left for this mis-u- s of the mother tongue, in October, 1896 and returned July 4, 1899. While jn'claring that all teachers, whe- Dree5rSS'G7man miT u he 1f0ref 88 Presdent over the .to that is now territory in the mission over which he has been called to preside. Included in the territory of the first mission in which he of others. Harold M. Peterson, Instrucwas a conference and a branch president were Dresden, tor In the junior high school, Johann Freiburg, Chemnitz, jorgenstadt, Leipzig, Mulhaussn, led the group at the outset of Sorau, and Beslau. He was branch president for a long time the institute In community at Sorau. singing. C. P. Daniels offered Some of this territory which will be in the the invocation. J. P. .Watkins, German-Austria- -- car-th- at i KZ ffiSXTS mdSXrnfi EMonSSfuS rlivft German-Austria- as-wx- ll - strS r- thsSl de-si- VLflvId'tore schooTUto er- - ....... dXered Tbrief ritoryJ;hat his father, the late President William Budge address of welcome. Tad over as an L. D. S. missionary in 1855. President Wil-le- n contributed two trombone liam Budge presided over the first German branch of the solos Frank Baush- new? toree' ,h conyerteJ Mormonism, among others, the noted Utah (numbers Smiling Through, G. Maeser, and an Elder Schonfeldt. Elder William Budge ,"Song of Songs, At and later presided over the European mission, and was president Dawning. of Bear Lake stake and of the Logan temple, holding the For one minute all Btood in silent tribute to the memory latter post at the time of his death. of R. V. late superinUpon his return from the German mission. President O. tendent ofLarsen, the Cache H. Budge returned to his home in Paris, Idaho,, and was schools, who died at his county home made president of the Y, M. M. I. A. of Bear Lake stake, in Smithfield on Thursday and later one of the seven presidents of seventies of Hear evelng, Bull-passe- d toety8Sirng Following the Institute the Lake stake. was to C. after hia return from his mission he went east to meeting McBride, Sdent of the study dentistry, returned, and in 1906 moved to Logan Logan Teachers association. Get ' Soon I where he was soon identified in church activities, serving as acquainted games, songs and of watermelon and assistant superintendent of the Cache stake Sunday school the servingfollowed as the closand later became superintendent which post he left to become cantaloup ing feature of the activities. president of Logan stake which was organized in 1920 from All city schools, with the portions of Cache stake. This position he has continued to exception of the Whittier, fill until the present time. which has been taken over as President Budge has followed the practice of dentistry in a training school by the U. S. A. C., will open Monday, SepLogan since 1906, doing- a general practice until 1920 when tember 8. he went east for post graduate study and has since confined Dr. Jensen was accompanied his work to dental extraction, and plate work. Dr, to Logan by Mr3. Jensen. They ' Budge has transferred his dental practice to Dr. LeRoy Soxpenenced considerable ,iii- Wilson, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Wilson, of River Heights, ficulty in traveling by auto who has returned from St. Louis, Mo., where he was gradu- mobile between Salt Lake City and Ogden owing to floods of ated last spring from the dental school of St. Louis uni- Thursday night at Centerville and Farmington. versity. Mrs. Margaret Sutton Budge, daughter of Mi, and Mrs, John A. Sutton, and wife of President O. H. Budge, "has been Mr. and Mis. J. Rennell an active worker in th$ Bear Lake, Cache and Logan stake Smith moved to Hyrum Thursday where Mr. Smithy, will 1 teach at the South Cache high. (Cvnfmueu Page Eight) ! - x-r- ay , . $50,000,000 Coffins Float Flood Waters, Cremate Bodies 50 at a Time, Few Clothes. The Jason F. Whitneys and a party of four enroute to their home in Evanston after attending a theatre- were- - robbed --of jewelry valued at $130,000 early day, 'including six fires which E. if. Myrick, supervisor of the To Give Lectures r Evanston, Santa ..Domingo. Republic, JWARD P. LEATIIAM about Announces Candidacy S. A. C. throughout apparently is jub-iiia- pt over the intention of Mr. Iyeatham to become a candidate since it has been many years since a Wellsville man attempted this race. Alberta Jensen, daughand Mrs. George C. Jensen, and a graduate of the U. S. A. C.. who is head of the English department of the Sugar City high school, is visiting for a few days with her parewts before resuming her training tor th. year. Miss ter of A A A A A Jl -- The Mr. $50,000,000. SkTpS,. Tr?m,S' S as 50 bodies at a time. Carlson, Fawn many Even at a distance of ten Anderson and Janet Cowley en- miles and at an altitude of tertained at a bouse party in in the air it was honor of Miss Aileen Swift, who 4,000 feet bodies were being is leaving for Prestn next week apparent burned. When we landed wa where she will make her home. could see wagons pass by loadSeven guest3 were in attendThe driver would ance. Music and games fur- ed with dead. and curse and cry, more nished the evenings entertain- shout more dead. dead, ment. Nine out of every ten trees are down and the tops of the few left standing have been cut-of- f as if by a great knife. Market Quotations i The Czama river is out of its banks north and east of the city and those sections are comGRAIN pletely inundated. 6 (AP) SusChicago, Sept. Men and women appear with pension of trading in grain fu(Continued on Page Three) tures in Buenos Aires and reports of a revolution there sent all grain prices soaring high Youth Hit With here today. Washington, Sept. 6 (AP) A Batted Ball; Killed world wheat crop of 2,337,139,-00- 0 bushels, an increase of almost 3 per cent over last year, Chicago, Sept. 6 ' (AP) was forecast today by the deFifteen year old Philip Labag-nerpartment of agriculture on the for his school basis of reports from 26 coun- mates pitching in a sandlot baseball tries. game yesterday, was struck In the head by a batted ball and STOCKS killed. New York, Sept. 6 -(- py-AW The ball struck him behind T&T 216 2, Beth Steel 89 ear as he turned to the Gen Elec 74 4, Nat Pow Si it. His skull was fractured. avoid Lgt 47 New Dental Office j POTATOES to passing the Subsequent S. state examinations, Dr. Lyman, Chicago, Sept. 6 (AP-on E. Smith is having the rooms 68, Dept Agr) Potatoes: track 173; totai United States over the Cardon Jewelry Co. on (modeled for his Dental office 753; stronger white stock, about steady on and expects to move in, in red: trading fair; Wisconsin ( the near future. His many sacked Irish cobblers 2:35-- 2 40 (friends are glad to hear that for best; Minnesota sacked Irish he is going to stay and prao cobblers few best tice in Logan. Stella Misses , By Rene M. Lepervanche Associated Press Correspondent (Copyright, 1930, all rights reserved by The Associated Press.) Santo Domingo, Sept 6(7pv Relief agencies speeding to the assistance of this stricken city today encountered conditions of horror which have been accentuated rather than mitigated since the storm Wednesday. Between 1,500 and 2,000 persons, it is estimated now, died in the hurricane which swept Santo Domingo, cradle of the) white race in the new world. More than 5,000 were injured. Thirty thousand are homeless and of 10,000 buildings but 400 are left standing. Property damage will pass $20,000,000. A United States marine corps officer who flew over from Port au Prince commented It is as if a giant hand had smeared the town down like a toy and then had stirred the pieces with a stick. There is no, water fit to drink. The waterworks are demolished, the river is a sea of mud and the dead are still . uncounted. Floods have washed out the newly buried dead in the cemeteries and coffins float around; like corks. The dead are being collected in mounds and heaps and trenches and are being burned above ground. Concrete In a statement made to a Journal representative Mr. Leatham pointed, out that he was accepting the race for county commissioner at the request oL Wellsville (AP) Persons who have - entered Santa Domingo from Villa Duarte, across the nver Ozoma, have reported more than 300 dead and 500 injured in the district of El Algibe and 167 bodies had been recovered la Villa Francisca. These newcomers,,, because the river bridge , was demolished, had to pass over the flooded stream by the means of a suspended cable. Hie dead in one maternity house in the city numbered 50. ,The building collapsed upon the mothers and new bom babies. Howard - P. Representative Leatham, Saturday announced that he would be a candidate on the Republican ticket this year and would make the race for county commissioner from the south end of the county. Mi-- . Leatham has served Cache county in the state legislature for two regular terms and one special session. For some time Mr. Leathams friends have been urging him to get into the race but the decision to become a candidate was not made until today. Mr. Leatham has been a prominent and successful dairy farmer, devoting some of r his time to dealing in grain. He is a native son of Cache valley being born in Wellsville. During his services as a legislator, Mr,- .Leatham' was, prominent in constructive state programs and signaled himself as a friend to the U. S. A. ,C. Friends who are supporting Mr, Leatham point out that he is a farmer, business man, legislator and a graduate, of the prominent citizens the county. - Dominican 6 . Howard P. Lealham to Sept- number of dead in the hurricane disaster this afternoon was placed at not less than 4,000 by Dr. Antonia Caldron, charged by President Rafael Trujillo with the direction of toe sanitary service. The dead, previously estimated at 2,000 were being pulled out of the wreckage at a dizzying rate. It is feared that' the total will reach 5,000. Thirty percent of the more than 5,000 injured are gravely hurt and expected to die. . Persons supervising toe survey of the devastation made it be known this afternoon that the damage to property will be a, 2, 1-- 3-- -- U. 2.10-2.2- 5. 1 , i 4,000; IpO.OOO Ilomeles.s Wa- For Commissioner ing Home from theatre when Their Car was Crowded to the Curb Carried De- ployed men Seeking dop-bi- o Party of Five Return- - Work. (By The Associated (Press) Copyright, 1930, and all rights reserved by The Associated Press. , Buencs Aires, Argentina, Sept 6 (Pj Revolt against President .Hipolito Ingoyen Hared up this gnomlng in the army and navy of Argentina. Both services made common cause against his administration. An officer, Lieut. Col. Francisco Torres of the air service, was shot and killed by his fellow officers for refusing to jom the movement. PholO The first cavalry ' regiment Lillian Gish, actress, received a had to join under threat, of t attack by artillerymen and in- -. lacerated hand when a mongrel her as she attempted to revfantrymen, The movement was led by Tier "5IcfWan puppy TronfTts attaftGeneral Jose Evaristo Uriburu, former Argentine chief of staff of the and inspector-genera- l Dr. Ralph Shaddock army and a nephew Qf an ex, president. D I, clares Six Fires were Started by 110(1 ESTIMATED AT OVER IN REGIME OF PRES. IRIGOYEII New Department Wins Favorable Comments DEATHS N 1130, 000 o i ni r1 ", - |