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Show .hie eraldkFouimal u. With which are combined the Cache THE Volume 22. Number 199. HERALD-JOURNA- d cS 1 CACHE dy dy dj dj d d dy We dont pay the boys to wind clocks at Michigan. Fielding Mi Yost, athletic director at Michigan. Valley Daily Herald, the Daily Herald and The Journal. LOGAN, UTAH, AUGUST 26, 1931 L, dy dy dy cS Price MM rr d dy Pf ajiiy dy d Cents uli InlUOVJ dy dy dj dy dy dy c5y dJ rp rp rp d . cp TEACHERS GIVEN ASSIGNMENTS 1 ay 5 I mi y (5j ey, What Folks Sa- y- COOPERATE i By Arthur Brisbane (Copyright, 1931) v aaaaaaaaaaa HAnrs'lVl1 Millikan Says No. Law Prices. Scientists Program prove that there is an electric current in the brain of a cat, strong enough to run a smaii The thing has been radio. done. If you could harness the power in the twelve human it brains, enumerated above, would run full blast all tjie auMichiin tomobile factories list of teachers and assignments for the opening of school next week in the Cache county system was announced today from the office A complete of - These pictures tell their story of the success of the Federal Farm Board and Grain Stabilization commitn tee which recently turned in! i bill for several millions of dollars for erpenses in stabilizing the price of wheat. The upper picture shows 25,000 bushels of wheat owned by J. O. Edgren of Ulysseo, Kansas. Mr. Edgren is leaving it piled on the ground until he can get enough for the grain to pay the harvesting expenses. Burning wheat fields are usually a calamity but William Bussell of Grant county, Kansas, only grinned when he saw his wheat fields going up in smoke as pictured at the right. It really doesnt matter is his only comment. own Superintendent J. W. Two vacancies remain to be filled. One is at Paradise and gan. and the other at Clarkston. A R. A. Millikan, of California, total of 152 instructors will beRATES UNREASONABLE whose work on cosmic rays has gin their work Monday. WASHINGTON, Aug. 26. (UP) made him famous all over the The list includes assignments The interstate commerce world, has grey eyes like those for all schools except the Step- commission today found that of an eagle omy more piercing-H- henson which is being closed and pertol-eusays, "there is nothing sur- this year as a part of the cen rates on petroleum in tank car loads of products in the preservation prising tralization program of the from points in Utah, Oregon, craftsmanship among American schools. schools MonWyoming, Thousands of machine which wereThe other announc- Washington, boys. Misoriginally Kansas, California, tana, service stations, garages, shops, ed as closing this year includ- souri and Oklahoma, to all all over the country, and twening the Cove, Cache Junction, in Idaho, and to Nyssa, ty five million automobiles, are River Heights and Wheeler are points and West : Yellowston, Ore., use to their boys teaching to remain open. Mont., are unreasonable. hands. The complete list of teachers follow. Professor Millikan also said and their S.assignments PROTESTS CLOSING A. Dunn, Bessie Hyrum he doesnt believe that the pow- Brown, Jennie Brown, W. S. SALT LAKE CITY, Aug. 26. er of the atom will ever be A vigorous Thelma protest Liljenquist, (UP) Bailey, harnessed. The power. is there, Pearl Johnson, Martha RaUison.j against the proposed closure to and Professor Jeans statement Constance Peterson, Lila hunting of the Bear River Mithat the force holding together Hilda Olsen. Arina Ralph. gratory Bird Refuge had been in' three electrons teaspoons the Millville A. R. Hovey, Rus- registered today by State Fish of Salt water would keep the sell Johnson, Annie Anderson, and Game Commisioner Newell biggest ocean steamship run- Cleo Neiison. B. Cook. no two is for exagyears, ning Paradise Edward P. Oldham, will man never But geration. S. Connie Howells, release that power. But NEVER Joseph BUYS POWER SITE Schiess. Kirk-brid- e. . m - ap ft m, .j , a long word. ' the drivel Near Dearborn, shows you hundreds of acres and many of Ford potatoes acres of sunnowers, the latter in full bloom. Ford, says he, is going to make ruboer out of those sunflowers and if he says so, he will do it. Witn rubber below five cents a pound tnat wont be profitable, but priced will change. borne signs along the road between Dearbome and Detroit will interest inhabitants of the otner dollar. places-Gasoline- , twelve gallons one in a Michigan avenue butcher shop, Hamburger sausage five aim one half cents a pound, btew meat four cents' a pound. Senator Couzens generous of one million dollars to gilt PS nelp Detroits unemployed is appreciated here as it should be. At prices quoted it can buy a good of gasoline, hamburger sausage ana stew meat,, ana -t i gasoline in our civilization is as important as stew meat. Henry Ford has just finished a handsome .hotel, in early American style, at his airport-Onof his three engine planes is just hopping off to Cnicago as you pass. V ' AS SALESMAN In addition each man agreed to act as a volunteer salesman for the Rocky Mountain Fuel company's product. With the statement, the miners opened their war on other of the large cool producers state who have Instituted 25 per cent wage cuts in the sou them Colorado field. The time has come, the union members declared in a statement of their stand, to rxsv , SALT LAKE 26. (UP) 26. Aug. Italian Smithfield Junior high C. A. Hurren, Floyd Thornley, Ralph Jones, Myrtle Dudley, W. R. Monson, Rulon Rose, Frances Vernon. Smithfield F. L. Allen, Myrtle Gwendella Larson, Thornley, Bessie Peterson, Willise Covey, Leah Plowman, Melba Plowman, Blanche winn. Cora Olsen, Vernon D. Law, Mary E. Kearns, Jean Crawford. Cove Oral Ballam, Joy Kent. C. B. Stoddard, Lewiston Sylmar Jessop. Orlie Bird, Myr- - MYSTERY IN Dispute Settled . GIRLS DEATH Connie Bird of Mendori. Wednesday died suddenly family morning at the Circumhome in Mendon. the stances surrounding Detroit deals wisely with radicase point to death by poicals who multiply and flourin soning. She was alone of ish in times oi depression. the house at the. time "We don't club them as you (Continued on page five) death. do in New York, says a DeAccording to Dr. E. L. troiter. We let them talk themHanson, the contents of a selves tired. the body cup found nearto the Thats wise, no boiler blows state sent are being VP while its safety valve is for analysis. Dr, chemist You could see three t.'orking. Hanson was called on the thousand radicals gathered in late this morning. case Detroit's grand circus park. One The girl, the daughter of BOY Phineas speaker cannot be heard beBird, has been in cause of the violent booing. 11 health for sometime and Oh, that guy is a damned to have been is reported conservative Socialist, says a of desponto James for services Funeral fits subject Communist "comrade, explaina half dency- Her mother ) dead and Steele, Sylvan year ing the booing. old son of Mrs. Veda Rogers She was about 23 yeas old. at held were addition to her father, In Tuesday Larsen, More permanently interesting 1 m. in the Sixth ward chapis survived by several she p. than food prices or radicalism el. The child was drowned and sisters. No rebrothers are tire foree plant, axle plant, in the North of the death had been morning Sunday port spring plant and wheel plant made to the sheriffs office irrigation caof the Chevrolet company, nal. late in the afternon. which you explore amid hear Olof I Pedersen was crushing din and intense heat in Bishop Musithe rites. for three hours, watching giant cal charge ofwere furnished' by hammers smashing red hot the numbers ward choir. Lawrence Bailblocks of iron into differentials, ey contributed a vocal selecaxles, and other giants of steel tion. working in long row i, no man Speakers who offered consolattending them, polisl ing, trim atory remarks to the family in ming, making dies. their bereavement were: Wil- - UTAH Fair tonight and No wonder Stalin comes from liam Michael Johnson, Thursday, except probably Russia to learn how an agricul- Arent Athay, Johnson and Bishop showers northwest portion: tural people can be Pedersen. 'Icoler west portion tonight. into an industrial people.changed He is were by Edward Prayers hiring hundreds of skilled men and Thomas J. Howell.! Maximum temperature, Tues- m Detroit at this moment and The grave at the Logan City(dav, 3; one yeu ago, 86. sending over hundreds of Rus- cemetery was dedicated last by Minimum temperature sians to. study here. Inirht. 62; one year ago, 63. John M. Richards, HIED Logan-Smithfie- ld defend' Our union contract and' wage acala against a cy and syeteraatl attempl aioperators to reduce wages and reduce coal miners to a condition of economic ; - - FUNEBALFOR 3 CHICAGO, ' 1L2U (UP) College The United States government Shenk. for $160,000 A. E. Allen, today purchased Providence properties in Lake County, Joseph Campbell, Diantha Ham- the SALT LAKE CITY. Aug. 26 Ernest Montana, of the Uublic Utilimond, Annice Reese, corporation, (UP) A sudden heart attack Maughan, Lucille Fife, Relda aties Consolidated subsidiary of the Montana late Tuesday night caused the Fuhriman, DeEsta Anderson. death of Mrs. Abble Hyde CowRiver Heights Leland G. Pul- Power company. ley, 68. sipher, Josephine Smith. Mrs. Cowley was the wife of Wellsville, Junior high V. R. GANDHI TO ATTEND Mathias Cowley and the mothCarver, Walter Perkins, Ruby 26. BOMBAY, Aug. (UP) er of County Attorney Matthew Leatham, Louise Brenchley. Mahatma Gandhi will proceed She was married in Wellsville Mary Perkins, An- to London to attend Cowley. 1884 in and taught nie Logan Buist, Gladys Hughes, the second Saturday round table confer- school two Elsie Cache years in Gunnell, ence on Indian Gladys Hill, was it affairs, county. Her education was seMary Jones, Valine Poppleton. announced today. Olcured at Brigham Young uniYoung Ella Neddo, Violet sen. versity, Provo and the UniverBenson Jesse T. Rees, Ina BLACK DAMP sity of Utah. Peart. uring her lifetime, Mrs. CowDUDLEY, la., Aug. 26 (UP) Black Damp, Hyde Park R. Homer Hyde, the deadly ley has taken an active interJ. W. Seamons, enemy of miners, was blamed est in the affairs of the L- D. May Perkes, Eunice Ciicroft. today for three deaths in a coal S. Church. North Logan N. J. Crookston, mine near here. Irene Beutler, Leah Farrell. Homer Daines, Riverside Religious Marie Peterson. O. E. Nelson, Erma SERENE, Colo., Aug. 26. (UP) Labor had come to the aid of capital today, as 600 union miners of the northern Colorado field prepared to finance the battle of their employes, the Rocky Mountain Fuel company, against wage reductions. The 600 announced yesterday they had voluntarily suggested postponement of payment by the company of one half their wages due them In August, September and October. EACH WILL ACT II Elia-so- n, is In Effort To Pay Scale In Centralizing' Safety Valve. DETROIT Company Stand Alone Only One School Ends Couzens Gift. VATICAN CITY, Aug. 26 (UP) It was stated semi-official- ly at the Vatican today that an accord had been reached for the settlement of the dispute between the Vatican and the Fas- cist government. The controversy centered on closure of Catholic clubs in Italy due to alleged political activity. Relations between the state and the Holy See have been strained for two months. Aug. 26 (UP) TOKIO, Japan, Col. and Mrs. Charles A. Lind7,000-mibergh, whose perilous flight from the United States to Japan was ended this afternoon at Kasumigaura airdrome, told at first hand tonight their adventures on the aerial vale cation trip. The young American aviator revealed for the first time how narrowly they escaped damaging their monoplane last week in a forced landing on the Kurile Islands. Col. Lindbergh that they might have met said ser- ious trouble if the government steamer Shinshiru Maru had not stood by. The Lindberghs arrived here to receive one of the most enthusiastic receptions Japan ever accorded foreign visitors. The ovation has been equalled in recent years only by the coron-ato- n journey of Emperor Hiroh-it- o to the summer capital at Kyoto. Col. Lindbergh expressed the belief that airmail and passenger planes flying between Japan and the United States would be feasible as soon as weather stations are established. He said that they never felt themselves in any great danger even during the troublesome experiences along - the Kurile islands, but that the flight proved the necessity of radio equipment. . The flier added they were uncertain as to continuing their flight around the world. Local Ranger Goes T o Aid In Fight On Fire racing flames overtook them on the north side of the summit on Grimes Pass. Panic stricken, the pair had fled, separating from their crew. They ran for the summit but lost their race with death. Reports from the fire front at Grimes Pass were meager thjs morning but it was learned that BOISE, Aug. 26 (UP) With the roaring inferno was comtwo human lives added to the pletely out of control and was tearing its way toward the Minghastly sacrifice heaped on the altar of Boise Basins fire de- eral Mining company. The battle aganist the flames mon, the red forest fiend had was being centered at the ridge today leaped all man made barriers at Grimes Pass. It was leading into the pass. A massed sweeping all before it, attacking defense there had held fairly the last defenses of the heroic well for two days until the falittle army of fire fighters who tal wind Tuesda yfanned up. In stood with their backs to the but a few minutes smouldering wall at the dam of the Grimes fires were whipped into roaring furnaces. Flashing blazes leapPara power company. Two youthful fire fighters. ed to the tops of trees. One Herbert Harvey, 2, Boise, and tree top ignited the next and Nolan Warner, Fillmore, soon Grimes Pass was in the 28, Utah, were burned to death path of a deadly crown fire Tuesday afternoon late when that was making fast headway. Ranger H. I. Hop Rice, ordinarily stationed in Logan canyon on the Cache National Forest, left early Wednesday for the Idaho National Forest, scene of the worst forest fire in the history of tbe state. CITY, Aug. Three thugs knocked Lee K. Lett, 47, Chinese truck gardener, unconscious early today and left him lying stretched across the Oregon Short Line track. The rumble of an approaching train aroused the man to realization of his danger. He scrambled away from the tracks . just before the locomotive roared by. smart, those robgrinned Lett. They got $12 but they missed $30 I had pinned inside my 1 shirt Not so bers, Forgets Name SANNTA BARBARA, Cal-Au- g. Charles E. Pressly, manager was pleased when he received a letter containing a check lor $150 to be used for the Spanish days fiesta. to The writer wishes aid the splendid fiesta, but is anxious to avoid personal glory, Presslv read. The letter, he found, was not signed. He then looked at the check It wasn't again. signed either. 26. (UP) ... TIKES OFFICE non-uni- on slavery. therefore give notice to operators that w I and the Rocky Mountain' Fue? company will mine and put coal in every market at prices which will meet any price n mcJe by operators who are viciously taking advantage of widespread unemployment and hunger to crush out the rights of workers to fair wages and recent American living standards, until this conspiracy is broken. We LONDON, Aug. 26 (UP) Br- itains new government of sacrifice, headed by Prime Minister J. Ramsay MacDonald, receved the seals of office from King George at Buckingham Palace at 1 a. m. today as the labor party prepared to fight the proposed dole cut. The new cabinet took the oath at a meeting of the privy council after members of the late laborite government had handed over their seals of office to the king. The cabinet was to meet immediately and begin the task of efecting economies in national expenditures sufficient to balance the budget and restore foreign confidence in the pound sterling. Members of the late labor cabinet who refused to sanction a reduction of unemployment benefits prepared strenuous opposition to the new regime. MacDonald was disowned in a labor party statement and his right to represent the party in the new cabinet challenged. all non-uni- on non-unio- COMPANY WOULD HOLD UP WAGES The miners Indicated their action was taken at this time to aid their company In carrying out its policy of high slack wages throughout the period In the coal industry which will last until the .Start of winter with Hts seasonal demand for fuel- - They further indicated a willingness, however, to increase the period of wage postponement If such a move became necessary. State industrial leaders to- day saw a fight in prospect between the Rocky Mountain Fuel and the rest of the industry in the state, for the coal markets, with the union miners themselves throwing into the fray to aid their com, pany. LICENSE FEES SALT LAKE CITY, Aug. 26. If the 15 per cent (UP) A drive was launched against the short interest in the late freight rate increase sought by An ordinance adopting a new trading on the stock exchange American railroads Is granted, method today and prices easily moved there is a grave possibility that tributors ofin licensingwasmilk disapprovLogan up after an early decline. Net the Nonferrous Mining industry ed by the Logan City commisgains ranged to 4 points. to forced west be sion in meeting Tuesday night. may Trading picked up in volume of the near the close and the stocks suspend operations completely. The new measure becomes efThis prospect was frankly fective immediately. moved up easily when demand The ordinance provides for a before Interstate made its appearance, indicating laid today according to observers, that the commerce commission hearing sliding scale of license fees in on the proposed freight rate proportion to the cows owned. list had been oversold. It is Intended, not as a revehearing. Promotion of the return of nue producing measure, but as a normal flow of traffic is the a means of registering all milk vital need of the metal Indus distributors and keeping an try, testified A. G. MacKenzie adequate check through inspecof the Utah Chapter tion before granting the liceri-se- s. Wholesale secretary SAN FANCISCO of the American Mining conPrices: Market Dairy But any Increase in The change is an outgrowth 92 score 30; 91 score gress. BUTTER rates would stifle the of a meeting between the comfreight score 28. 90 29; movement of ores and metrs mission and officers of the and make a bad situation Logan Dairymen's assn reworse. cently at which the new plan MacKenzie said production was worked oub The ordinance is published prices of silver, lead, copper and zinc are far below produc- elsewhere in the Herald-Jour-n- al in full. It provides for a tion costs. Silver and copper CHICAGO, Aug. 26 (UP) are at the lowest point In his- minimum license fee $1 for one Grain range: cow and 50 cents per cow Wheat tory. .47 8 .46 .48 Only two of the 286 taxed up to a maximum of $7.50.con-A Sep. .46 on delivery In glass upen High Low Close Utah mines, he said, are on a clause tainers for large distributors 52 dividend paying basis. .50 8 .521-- 4 .50 -4 Dec. 8 The hearing Is expected to is also contained in U.3 Mar. .54 3 .57 Ml Close tomorrow. ,571-- ? ,55 May .56 NEW YORK, Apg. 1- -8 1- -2 26. (UP) 1- -2 3- 7-- 8.581-2.541-8.- 3-- 55 3- -4 , J |