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Show The Todays New- ssee how Boots turns cupid. Page three at the bottom today. HerslM Jouamal We have not made as much progress as the clatter of the times would suggest. Henry Ford. With which are combined the Cache Valley Daily Herald, the Daily Herald and The Journal LOGAN, UTAH. Volume 22. Number 279. STlMsON-JAPANES- What Folks Say MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3 0, 031. 1 FIVE OCLOCK EDITION Price 5 Cents. WORD WAR CLOSED INCIDENT E ) By A,rthur Brisbane (Copyright, 1930 i linai Great WalL i Enough I'or Everybody. Cheap Transportation, rp rHpfKpKJvpcprprpfp rp Kp rvp CP Cp rp rp rp c) cQp UNITED PRESS TO TEST LAW WASHINGTON. Nov. 30 Utahs at fighting the point) where the great wall of China runs down to the sea. that built the , Those dncients great wall could not imagine llylng machines that would roar Street Lighting- And cbove it.) They thought they had forewr shut out attack by Decorating Arc barbarian! hordes. Nearly Set Imposstile for us to Imagine how little the walls that we bund of finance, industry, law Merchants arc fast making will andproTwrty protection, official Christmas amount Ito a few centuries ready for the shopping season opening at 6 hence. ) m. Tuesday. pI Work setting the large That Japanese one day would evergreen oftrees on either side fly over pie great wall did not of the metal light standards on occur to (the Chinese that built Main. Center and First North it. That t PROPERTY one day streets was under way Monday will NOT ae the most important morning. thing In. the world, or at all Red and green celloglass was important cannot be imagined placed over each street lamp by those that build laws to pro- shade Saturday. Sunday the city hunout the tect it ad keep took on a part of the yuletide gry, and dissatisfiedatmosphere that it Is to have this season when the red and was used. Wires Nobody! quarrels about salt green celloglass water ob fresh air, there are for the small red and green either side of Main, Dlenty of both for everybody. lights along The day is coming when nobody Center, and First North streets will quarel about property or have been strung by the munitake any special interest in it. cipal power crew. There wfl be enough for every-bod- y, The holiday season this year, will eiytngh food, good books, Logana merchants promise, larger variety of Christmusic aid leisure the only show mas goods of all kinds than lothings rellly important. cal patrons have ever had prej sented before. Today pen accumulate money, Many windows in the uptown wear thenselves out and lose the business district have already their chiacters doing it, asener-- been decorated and filled with tumble-bi- g exhausts his goods. Some storekeepin his holiday gies storjfcg up treasures not be ers will have windows especially store hotee. Men will trimmed for the holiday season, That is tumble-btg- s forever. will not uncover them until somethin! to be thankful for. and 6 p. m. Tuesday when the yule-tid- e The c Hinge will come when in Logan Is officially on. the inteygence of men ana their science are devoted to proin- viding erwugh for everybody, stead of oo much tor a few. PRESIDENT NIBtEY ' Ill DENVER se You hare read of a flight by Charles Butler, British, from 11,500 England "to Australia, miles in 9 days, 1 hour, 32 minutes, leating the world's record by an hour. More interesting. he Jew in the world's weighing smallest airplane, about 50$ pounds, and the trip and hundred one cost him only seventy cellars for fuel and oil, less than two cents a mile. Airplane with diesel engines and cheap fuel will divide that cost by ten before long. make Already automobiles travel so cheap that railroads will be compelled to revise or methods transportation abandon Short hauls for freight, all hauls' for passengers. George Bleistein, Recently. known to everybody in his city, travelled ;from Buffalo. N. Y. to Allaire, IF. J. in a Ford automobile, vlbiting this writer- - The car that carried two passengers could as easily and cheaply The trip, have carried five. made in' one day, about 500 miles, cost for gas and oil five dollars and ten cents. For ' five passengers that would have of a cent a mile. been For the jtwo passengers it was la cent a mile, one-ha- lf Amos W. Woodcock To Invest iff ate SALT LAKE CITY, Nov. 30. When Henry Dierks, upper, killed Malford G- Smith, below, in a scuffle over three ounces of wine which Dierks was attempting to get aS evidence, it started action that was climaxed when Amos W. Woodcock, national director of prohibition, arrived in Denver today for an investigation of the affair. A l C - HAMMOND, Ind., Nov. 30. Police. 250 citizens and - ?)RGET OPENER, NEARLY STARVE IN OPEN BOAT Mor-frift- mo- OUT OF DANGER MINEOLA, L. I, Nov. 30. H'Pt MLss May Gledhill, Canadas beautiful "ski girl, who lived happily In the home of her lover's wife until questioned by immigration authorities and a Salvation Army worker, was reported out of danger at a Mlneola hospital shortly before noon today. GAS BLOWS IN OGDEN, Nov. 30 u:.P Further matter," investigation of the Natural gas potentialities .of the .Bear River game refuge region were being made today after a gas well blew in on the refuge Sunday. - PLANT (UR) tion picture actor, apparently had won his fight for life today and was recovering from per.tonitis which set in after an emergency appendicitis operation a week ago. declared he wras through with Dierks, whom he characterized as a brutal and stupid agent when he suspend ed him. My order suspending him was as far as I could go in the case, the dry chief said, but I expect the civil service to commission the accept word of the administrative officer that Dierks deserves permanent dismissal. (U RABBITS FOR NEEDY SALT LAKE CITY, Nov. 30 P) Thousands of rabbits were FINISH on charges ofvflrst degree murder were expressed here yesterOGDEN. Nov. 30 (UD J. W. day in the pulpit of the Free churcJ? by Rev. H Randall, manager of the Ama- JMethodist father of Winnie McKinnell, lgamated Sugar company, has Ruth Judd. announced that the Wilson factory of his company will LINDY IN AIR cease operations the end of this FLAGLER BEACH. Fla.. Nov week. (U.R) Colonel Charles A The sugar beet factory has 30. his flight to resumed Lindbergh 2,000,000 of sugar bags produced to date. Operation was contin- New York today, taking off in uous from the start with the an Army observation biplane from here shortly before 10 exception of one interval of 12 a. m. MORE TROOPS TOKIO, Nov. 30 'UP' Ota thousand Japanese troops wert ordered to Tsitsihar today on receipt of reports that 3()0f troops under Gen Hsu subordinate Chinese com mander. were menacing north ern Manchuria. Pao-Che- ed NEW ROCKET PLANE WANGEROOGE. East Frian new Islands, Nov. 30 UP)-- A model rocket airplane, propeilec by 13 pounds of explosives and measuring less than five feet in length, soared 32,000 feet in the air here today. CLEAN SWEEP INTERNATIONAL LIVESTOCK States senator from j SHOW, Chicago. Nov. 30 tUP'-s- as 1932, and if not whether Four clover growers from Bend United Charles Curtis in will I shall accept another nomina he announced today that viceto the seek renomination tion for vice president in the event of its being tendered to presidency. WASHINGTON. Kan-- (UR) nt Curtis said he had decided me. the remainder of the not to be a candidate for Sen- statement reasons have been as-- 1 ator from Kansas, a matter he has had under consideration for signed by my friends, to sup- many months. port either course I pursue " His three paragraph anThe announcement was taken nouncement issued from his of- by most politicians as probably to be thankful forfice concluded with the state- Insuring the of and ment : Curtis. Secretary of War Pat- becoming8 v After careful consideration I rick J. Hurley, widely mention- - in north butSIi LOW BID s htly vlmer in have decided not to be a can- ed as a possible candidate for n th portion. didate for the U S, senate from said WASHINGTON, Nov. 30. UR- -A fie suggest that ashopping you Kansas in 1932. and further, that he would not be arecently candiUTAH Fair and low bid of $118,900 for congo. that if the next Republican Na- date if Curtis desired renomina- Tuesday; continuedtonight cold. struction of the federal jail Cause you haven't too much tional convention nominates me tion. It is generally assumed time, you know. Billings, Mont., was submitted Maximum temperature Sunfor vice president I shall ac- here that before making his anset is if the father And, lowering by Longbotharo nouncement Curtis ascertained day, 22; one year ago, 24. cept. said-Man- j I - jT0 For what you want to get. Minimum temperature last There has been presented for that President Hoover would be and give you my decision the question whe- willing to have him as a run- night, 4 below; one. year ago. the dough. 5. ther I shall be a candidate for ning mate again. He will dig down - i Wednesday The Second ward, Fifth ward and Seventh ward chapels will be used as polling places for the school election Wednesday. This announcement was made by Clerk David Tarbet of the city school board Monday morning. Persons of voting age residing in Districts 10 and 11 which comprize a part of the Fifth for school municipal, ward elections will cast their ballots in the Fifth ward chapel. Those living in District 9 which forms the other part of Ward Five, vote in the Seventh ward chapel. Municipal Ward two voters will go to the polls in the Second ward chapel, First South and Fourth West steets. Ward two embraces Districts Three and Four of the city election zones. Interest is running high In both wards. L. W. Hovey, president of the city board of education, who is filling the unexpired term of Bishop J. H. Watkins, is opposed by John E. Olson in Ward Five for election as board member. Bishop Charles England of the Second ward is now filling the unexpired term of the late Louis S. Cardon. He must face the opposition of Bishop William Worley of the First ward and W. F. Kowallis. Polls for the school election open Wednesday at 7 a. m. and ar Nov. 30 incomes aren't as common as they used to be. The treasury department today reported that only 149 persons moved in that exclusive circle in 1930, as compared with 513 in 1929. This is a drop of nearly 71 per cent. How the deflation of the stock market in the dark autumn of 1929 deflated millionaires as well as the rest of us Is told graphically in the cold, unemotional "statisics of income for 1930, made public today by the treasury. Speculative losses in 1930 as compared with 1929 totalled $1,215,055,449. losses to the stock and bond ventures of $5,000 or less amounted to $317,000, Investment little fellow1' 000. Profits from speculative investments in 1930 were $775,315,899. or a little more than half the 1929 total. Tax liabilities decreased half a billion. Returns filed decreased $658,150. Aggre7. gate income fell off IN Relations Strained , Braced, Solid j Again TOKIO, Nov. 30 UB The Stimson Incident appeared closed today both as an international affair and a domestic . political Issue, as the story behind the incident became known. War Minister Gen. Jiro Mln-asaid after a cabinet meeting at which he asked Foreign Ministed Baron Bhidehara - for details of his conversations with Ambassador W. Cameron Forbes ml regarding the Japanese agreement not to attack Chinchcrw that he, Minaish1 considered the matter closed, ALL EFFORTS ARE ENDED . f . I This was interpreted to mean that efforts of the opposition to embarrass the foreign minister over the Stimson incident t had ended. FATHER DIES The foreign office retracted its statement denouncing Stimson after it became known that a news agency blunder misquotID SALT ing Stimson was responsible for. what threatened to be the most serious international Incident In t the Manchurian problem. Ik & fihltatari,. ehiaf of. thf . to- J. B. Ripplinger, father of - . . HE A Ripplinger who is circulation telligence bureau and spokesman, for the foreign office, Isof the Herald-Journa- l, died suddenly Saturday In Salt sued a vigorous condemnation Lake of heart failure, according of Stimson Saturday on the manager to word received here. Funeral services have not been announced. Mr. Ripplinger was bom In Alsace-Lorrain- e, PROVIDENCE PROVIDENCE-Fune- ral ALL TROUBLE $7,248,-543,35- Rip-ling- Curtis Tosses Hat .in Ring as Hoover Mate Nov. 30 Hoard Members Million-doll- today being distributed to the France, in 1860, needy of Salt Lake. The animals and came to this country after were killed Sunday in Juab close at 7 p. m. being converted to the L. D. S. county by 250 Salt Lake hunters The board membership in faith as a young man. He marled by Police Lieutenant E. A. both wards are expected to be ried Louise Beutler who now Hedman. lives in Logan. hotly contested. The following children also GANG VICTIM survive: Richard and Earl RipCHICAGO, Nov. 30. (UR) The plinger. Driggs: Henry J. body of an unidentified victim Ogden; Warner Ripplingof a gangster ride slaying was er, Buhl; L. A. Ripplinger, Lotossed from a sedan at a busy FUNERAL HELD gan; Mrs. Asa Drake, Victor; northwest street intersection toMrs. Sheridan Evans, Rigby; day. and Bertha Ripplinger, Buhl. PRAYS FOR SOUL PHOENIX, Anz., Nov. 30. n i'i Houes for the soul of his daughter who is awaiting trial ' The department of agriculture announces that airplane; will drop copper sulphate dust It will kill the snails, the fluke laryae will have no place to develop, and the sheep will not be killed. That Is something for sheep Cherokee HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 30 Tom Mix, famous cowboy Woodcock a group of Communist ger marchers started what might have been a riot but soon after it got under way, everybody sat down and just had a good cry. The tears that flowed from the eyes of Communists, citizens and police alike were induced by a tear gas barrage laid down by the officers to halt the incipient riot. backfired attack The however. Officers were crying too hard to make any arrests and Communists, tears running from their eyes, were glad to leave town in trucks that were them on their carrying 'hunger march to Washington, D. C. Tile Communists had ignored a police order against demonstrating as they passed through here and the general melee of citizens, police and Communists y, is a serious agent. hun- 30. rV .A Indian, chief Edward Red Wing, On the Woodcock declared. face of a letter, I saw over Vivians signature it would seem that the administrator tried to borrow the money from Dierks two months before he appointed him as a prohibition (U.R) Logan Voters Select Lake City- - INDIAN ELECTROCUTED HUNTSVILLE, Tex, Nov. 30. of wine., today brought Col Amos W. Woodcock, national prohibition director, to Denver for a complete investigation of Vivian's methods of enforcing the dry law. Woodcock declared his investigation would cover every phase of Vivians official acts and that he would stay in Denver "until the first of the year, if necessary to get to the bottom of charges that Vivian had private financial transactions with the men under his command. Woodcock said he took the first train for Denver after hearing charges that Vivian negotiated for a $4,000 loan from Henry F. Dierks, the agent acof murdering cused young Smith. That President Charles W. Nib-leof the First Presidency of Latter-day the Saints church, was somewhat improved" today his family and also church officials announced. President Nibiey has been severely ill for the past week and has been confined to his su te in the Hotel liUTT. The illness originated with a severe cold but as- the sickness progressed, complications set in. sheep with the grass, and the sheep die- Liver-flUk- e, snails and sheep probably would say men can mever do anything about that. They are mistaken- advertising storm that burst around John was led to his death today in F. Vivian, regional prohibition the Huntsville penitentiary still administrator, after the fatal denying his guilt of the crime Meiford for which he was convicted. beating of G. Smith by a prohib.tion agent MIX BETTER in a scuffle over three ounces REPORTED BETTER (l'.i!- i- Salt (U.P1-- Nov n: n, one-fift- company, St. Paul. Minn., it was announced by the department of justice today. rp fp Sudden Drop WASHINGTON, UR1 consideration today when the tribunal announced it would hear argument on a test case brought attacking the validity of the statute. The appeal was brought by the Packer corpor-atioowners of billboards in Death DENVER. anti-cigaret- te law' was promised supreme court LOS ANGELES. Nov. 30 by food, two Pas-- 1 idena college students endured the privations of shipwreck and hours. iinnerless Thanksgiving because The Missoula, Mont., plant of has been served upon they had forgotten to bring a subpoena Amalgamated will close Morgan & Co. calling for the :an opener, their story revealed J- production of records so that about Jan. 1 and is expected to today. Hofstadter committee might produce 275.000 bags of sugar. Pete Decote, 21, and Edward Idaho, plant has Harrison, 19, set sail for Cata-- . learn whether Mayor James J. The Burley. i down with a proina Island, their sloop loaded Walker or his missing agent, already shut while the T. Sherwood, have any duction of 125,000 A most valuable asset is the with canned food. Just off tlie interest in certain Lewiston. Utah, factory will railroad rights of way. which sland, a sudden squall demol-- ! financial operate until December 24 with nothing can ever replace. But .shed their mast, and they companies for which the of for two days before be- - 6an firm acts as transfer agents an estimated production they must be utilized with 350.000 bags. k was learned today. modern methods at modern ng rescued. speed and modern economy. They were unable to open any f their canned food, they said, they had forgotten a Have you heard of the liver-fluk- e because an and were familisli-- d opener, of that destroys thousands when up. picked liver-fluke of the larvae sheep? The live in snails, are dropped by snails on pastures, eaten by Y p Vp Incomes Take FROM THE LOS ANGELES. Imagination Is stimulated by the story of . rp rp Cossackism! L . Kp MERCHANTS PLAN YULE OPENING ON TUESDAY flashes POLLS SET Millionaire Why Sheep Give Thanks. Chinese-Japane- rp Cvp basis of a news dispatch from' Washington which said that Stimson bad accused the Japanese army of running amuck In Manchuria and that he had ac- -' cused Japan of aiming to take all Manchuria from China. . When it became clear that Stimson had been misquoted, and the foreign office had been Aminformed of the facts by bassador W. Cameron - Forbes and Japanese Ambassador Kat-su- jl Debuchi In Washington, the foreign office spokesman revoked his earlier statement. He said that the government considered the incident closed. No government statement will be issued- NEWS DISPATCH CAUSES TE0UBLE . The news dispatch servi- which caused all the trouble was distributed by the Japanese Rengo news agency on the basis of an Associated Press dispatch from Washington. It was confirmed SALT LAKE CITY, Nov. 30 by the Rego agency which is al(U P) The asserted Moormcistcr lied with the Associated Press murder confession of Warren F. and receives a subsidy from the Pope, 21, is an utter hoax, pol- Japanese government, that the ice announced today. cable purporting to quote StimPope, while serving a sentence son was received from the Asfor desertion in the naval prison sociated Press via San Franat Portsmouth. N. H.. confessed cisco. to various major crimes among which was the murder of Mrs. Dorothy Dexter Moormelster, who was killed on a suburban road of Salt Lake in the late winter of 1930. NEW YORK, Nov. 30 (UR) A Officers said they had located desharp upturn in wheat changed a man. F. M. Angle, clared uostively that Pope was the trend of the stock market into a rise. playing cards the entire night from a alldecline sections of the list Nearly of Mrs. Moormeisters death. responded to short covering operations and prices moved up 1 to 4 points, most of the gain being retained. There was no rush to buy. however, and volume of operations remained about the same as last week, the average of which was well below' the 2,000,-00- 0 share mark. Railroad shares displayed a GALLUP. N. M.. Nov. 30. UR)i Hardly had they readied distinctly improved tone, a facthan 100 Navajo In- - libation, before they were in- tor in the rise in other sections of the list- At the outset the dmns. men women and children, volved in plans to save their rails met further pressure and .till were marooned on the cold, windswept mesas of wes- sheep and cattle, facing death their action had a dampening the uptern New Mexico today, six from starvation because of the effect elsewhere. BeforeNew York turn later in the day, days after they were trapped by same storm, which has covered Central made a record low and t.hp grazing lands of the south i terrific blizzard Two hundred of the nut west under two and three feet Pennsylvania equaled its low. vester- - of snow. pickers reached here Constantly battling for life County Heads To day. many of them exhausted from the long battle for life in against poverty, famine, disease Meet On Tuesday and in the old days, against the bitter cold that broke Ileven the wandering war parties of weather records. A call has been Issued to Indians perished in the cold. Apaches, the Navajos looked upcounty commissioners, clerks, They arrived in dilapidated on the horrors of the last trucks and on the backs of as just another fight for exist- assessors, and treasurers to meet with the state tax commission scrawny, near-dea- d pon.es. A ence. The plight of their herds and Wednesday at 10 a. m. at the few arrived in big government trucks. The latter had killed flocks affected them more than Hotel Bigelow in Ogden. Because of this meeting the and eaten their ponies to ward their own sufferings. The Navacounty commissioners off starvation. jos and the Zunis are pastoral. Cache With the typical stoicism of They eke out an existence from will hold their regular weekly the Indian, they were reluctant their flocks, herds, and from session Tuesday at 10 a. m- - at to discuss their suffering during their gardens, their looms and the courthouse instead of Wedtheir pottery and baskets. the storm. nesday, the regular day, v ces for Mrs. Anna Buhrer of Providence who died Thursday of old age. were lirld Sunday in the Providence Second ward chapel. Bishop II. M. Zollinger presided. One of the principal speakers were Jacob Zollinger. He told how lie had converted the. Buhrers to the L. D. S. faith and how they had come to the United States in 1891. Other speakers were Adoiph Baer, William Campbell. Joseph Checketts, President A E. Anderson and Bishop Zollinger. Musical numbers were by the ward choir led by A. M. Mathews. Prayers were by C. W. Dunn and N. W. Fuhriman. Interment was in the Providence cemetery where the grave was dedicated by W. R. Zollinger. Hundred Indians Still Marooned by Blizzards civi-Mo- all-ti- |