OCR Text |
Show The Herald"Journal Today's News Has Hoover kept his pledge as president and leader of these United States? four, Page column two. What Folks Say . With which are combined the Cache Valley Daily Herald, the Daily Herald and The Journal Volume 22. Number 290. LOGAN, :v'a CHURCH Today if i UTAH. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 193 12, FIVE O'CLOCK 1. A - "To regard present condition as permanent, and theivto leg!, late as if they were, is a-- , serious mistake. Hepry Ford. Price 5 Cents. EDITION ADER TO BE BlIRIED IN LOGAN By Arthur Brisbane (Copyright Sic Transit 1931) NO PORT IN A STORM Taxes, Taxes, Taxes. r Bombing Planes, Busy. 12 Blizzards isolate Colorado City Once More Mew G'oria N.Y.C. Against 600. flashes I FROM THE There Are No Harbors on the Ocean of Life d for Craft UNITED PRESS Hard-Presse- If stock market prices interest you, tins is real news. The New oik Central railroad, one of the best and most ably managed ut tne United States, passed Its dividend Thursday for the first time in sixty years. The stock sold in 1929 above $250. He it sold Thursday for $25. with hkth put down tne mighty" CREW DROWNED The LONDON, Dec. 12. Abandon Rail Travel United States must do something ABOUT and OR its --"'The In Snow Swept 'railroads. They have made mistakes. So h'as everybody else, Irom the top down, for the nation to be indifferent to the troubles of railroads is as foolish as for an individual to be indifierent to hardening of his arteries. Railroads are the arteries and veins of the physical, industrial and commercial national body. ' It is absolutely essential to tlie public welfare that railroads have Whatever financial assistance they need, also important tnat they be managed by railroad men, that understand railroads, and those men not held in bondage by official theorists. .Those for whom the words have hitherto income tax meant nothing, except the pleasant loading of national expense on to the bigger pocket-book- s. will take an interest in those words hereafter if Mr. Mellons proposals go through. Be would sod one million seven hundred thousand to the number of income tax payers, &M Income tax payers now "In tne low bracket" will find their tax raised- The fact that it is necessary for those hitherto exempt to carry their share of the burden will not seem a good reason. - China reports two more air bombings by Japanese fighting planes. One village was struck by 21 bombs, another village, lawa, was riddled by seven bombs, and raked by machine gun fire from the planes. Chinese residents of Chinchow are frightened by Japanese planes tlying only thirty feet above their roofs. are learning The Chinese about modern war, and our government ought to be learn-m- g about it also. There are three things Imnow, courage, portant in warsubmarines. airplanes and Great is the power of the armed. Twelve Chinese bandits, waving a red flag, held up tne Six Peiping Mukden express. Chinese hundred passengers, some and foreign, including Americans, stood humbly sub-- missive their DURANGO. Colo, Dec The Manchester .guardian of late years the most powerful of England's old fashioned newspapers, ardent, .ujuce&sing. supporter of the league df nations, has changed its mind suddenly. It now discovers that the league is a failure and the trouble proves it. It needs no ghost to come from tne grave, or Manchester guardian, to tell us .that. John J. Raskob, chairman of se Democratic national com- mittee, tells a luncheon to appoint minute men to work for the Democratic party, that he foresees a long democratic era In the United StatesMr. Raskob is very able, he proved It long before he went into politics, and he knows that what the democratic party need Is not minute men but FOUR YEAR MEN, able to look ahead, work hard and keep at it. Democrats, wont have any tlong tenure of national office unless they can stop fighting Inside the party and come to the starting line NOT with their each in entwined fingers others hair. 4 "I1 Our job, said a political leader the other day, is to steer the ship of state safely into the port of prosperity. But, kind sir, there are no ports on the ocean of life; no safe harbors for ships of state or even lowly citizens. We are all afloat on the stream of time ; But its only a myth. Just now our craft rides the storm a bit water- logged, with some of the crew out of commission, sails and none too good seamanship on the bridge. There may, it is true, be better weather ahead but a wise seaman never counts on good weather. He keeps-hiship trimmed and tight and trust in skill and experience, NOT in luck. We may as well realize now that we have got to repair the old ship, storm or no storm, and do it in midocean unless we want to end upon the rocks of despair or the shoals of disaster. Just as long as we keep putting off the repairs and hoping, vainly, for a safe harbor, just so much leakier and more battered will the old ship get. tattered SEINE FISK TO I POl plan to seine river and let local residents now numbered sell among the unemployed them in Logan, and catch them for the community storehouse free distribution to needy families was unfolded to the city commission Friday night. Chairman A. A. Firmage of the Community storehouse committee told the commission negotiations are under way with the state fish and game department for permission to seine the river for fish. Mr. Firmage .requested the city dads to re- fuse licenses to fish peddlers for the time being and pave the way for the unemployment relief pioject. . and Mayor A. G I Olof Commissioner City, Pedersen, and City Attorney Leon Fonnesbeck expressed their approval of the project Large quantities of fish it is believed, can be seined from the river in a short time, thus giving work for some time to unemployed. It may also serve as a means of further raising funds for the work of the storehouse in distributing needed supplies through the winter, in the opinion of backers of the plan. Lund-strom- SALT LAKE CITY. Dec. s Hyram Stake Conference is Tonight 12. ttJ.R) Four state which have been pelted intermittently with snowstorms during the past three days looked forward today to clear and crispy cold weather. The storm, the Salt Lake weather bureau announced, has from apparently abated. Aside localized sr.ualls. Utah was enjoying clear weather today. So was Nevada. Southern Idaho and northern Montana were still in the grips of the tag end of the disturbance but will probably experience sunshine tomorrow. Primary highways have been kept open in Utah, to date, and barring unusually heavyof snow, perthere is little prospect manent closures. Six summit eonnerting highwavs. however have been closed for the winter. Hyrum stake quarterly conference will open Saturday evenrng at 7:30 p.m. in the Third ward chapel. Meetings will be held Sunday beginning at 10 a. m. and 2 p. m. The M. I. A. will be in charge of the Sunday evening session It was not known Friday night who would represent the general authorities. A (UR) yen and another sharp setbaek in bank stocks unsettled the stock day and drove the leaders to l0Wi evelS m2,Yfmen'-- 1116 fQr . , had to contend The with a declining grain market and further selling in bonds. Cotton also joined the downward procession after Its rally vesterday. Bar silver lost a fraction. EARLY IDAHO HOOPER. Utah., Dec- 12 u.R Illness of a week with pneumonia had today claimed the life of William G. Hall, 89, pioneer and one of the first settlers of the Pioneer community of Franklin, Idaho. Hall was the last living member of Idahos original group of permanent settlers. As a boy of 17. he crossed the plains in 1859 and Immediately moved to Franklin where he resided 11 years. In 1870, Hull moved to Hooper where he has lived since. U.R Fugitive convicts who escaped from the Arizona State prison this week are financing their getaways with funds obtained checks from official prison were stolen from the wardens office, it was disclosed re today TRIAL ,, ENDED Bto centered The investigation around these points: 1. How the convicts obtained the rifle and revolvers with which they covered the. warden and guards and forced their way through the prison gates. 2: Whether the liquid in ties the convicts showed Warden White with a threat to blow up the penitentiary if he did not accede to their demands con- tamed mtioglyrenne. 3. Whether the covicts were under the influence of narcotics when they made their mad dash for llberty peI1it,entiarv officials remained silent on the progress of the results of investigation and 'their questioning of the three recaptured convicts, saying their report would be made direct to department of justice in washinpton an.d ,efP71sf, 11:25 a. m. today in trial Kane III., ; operated upon today at Johns Hopkins hospital. Magnet Pulls Steel, SALT LAKE CITY, Utah. Dec. u in Exasperated Rocky PLAN INVESTIGATION 12 coaches !URSALT LAKE CITY.of Dec. the NaAn investigator their antional Fire Underwriters was en ef- Young 24 Montana at Ogden; at San Francisco, Oct. 1; Utah U., Oct. 15; Colorado Teachers, at Provo, San Francisco U. Wyoming at Laramie. Utah Aggies at Provo, Western State, Nov. 24. Utah Aggies: University of Idaho, Southern Branch, at Logan, Sept. 24; Montana State College at Logan, Oct. 1; Colorado U., at Boulder. Oct. 8; Western State at Logan, Oct. 15: University of Utah, at Salt Lake. Oct- 29; Colorado Aggies, at Ogden, November 11; B Y. Oct. 22; Nov. 12; Nov. 19; ll at Provo, Nov. 19. The mortal remains of President Charles rj oilVCS Alan , S - Logan for short graveside services and interment. President Heber J. Grant and' other general authorities of the church are making' plans for .the. funeral but no announcement has been made as to local arrangements. Speakers at the services in Salt, Lake will be President Grant, President Anthony W. Ivins, and Arthur Winder. Mr. Winder is chief clerk in the office of the' first presidency and secretory and treasurer of the L. D. S. church board of education. The body will lie in state at the residence of Horace ' B. Whitney, 223 Fourth avenue, Salt Lake City, prior to the funeral and Immediately after services 'will be" brought to Logan. The state highway is arranging a special patrol to escort the funeral cor- - rJJeeWent Nibtor died early TOaay afternoon of pneumonia His death dame as a shook to toe general public although re- -t latlves and close friends had been expecting the end for some time. ; He was' born in Edinburg, Scotland, February 5, 1849, the 4"- C. W. j WHAT IS THIS STRANGE POWER BALTIMORE, Md., Dec. 12 Six women fainted (U.R) when Lawrence Tlbbett, motion picture and opera star sang his Cuban Love Song at a relief ball. Tibbett had barely finished his song before a crowd of 4 500 last night when 200 women deserted escorts and fought their way to him. Scrambling over chairs and tables, thev sought to clutch his hand and clothes. One woman lifted a trembling hand to his cheek. Oh, Mis-t- er Tib-bet- t, she gasped. And then she swooned Five others, ranging away In age from 20 to 40, soon joined her. Tibbett tried to stoop to the floor to help thp woman but the pressing throng thrust him aside. Gee whizz, thats too he said. Policemen finally mad their way through the crowd and carried the dishevelled but still smiling Tibbett to safety. bpH . - President A. E. Anderson of the Logan Stake and President Joseph E. Cardon of the Cache stake have requested all high council-me- n and bishoprics of their respective stakes to be present at the graveside services in Logan Sunday afternoon. The funeral cortege is expected to readh Logan from Salt Lake about 3:30 or 4 p. m. NIBLEY -- William G. Baxter, former Logan musician and well known locally, died early Saturday morning at Butte, Montana, according to word received by relatives here. Mr. Baxter was taken ill with pneumonia sometime ago and as his condition grew worse, a sisters. Mrs. Myrtle Hunter of Logan, and a brother, Del Baxter, Cornish, went to his bedside, were whh him when he son of James and Jean Wilson' Nibley, who had been converted to the L. D. S. faith in 1844. . The family came to Utah, arriving in Salt Lake City after much hardship, in 1860. They settled in the pioneer settlement of Wellsnlle, arriving there September 3, 1860. The first winter in Cache Valley, they spent in a crude dugout. His rise in both church and (Continued on Page Eight) runeral services will be held in Butte Sunday after which the body will be brought to Logan. It will be at the home of Mrs. Hunter at 26 East Third North, Monday until time for the funeral services which will be m the Logan Fourth ward P Myes at VAN NUYS. Calif.. Dec. 12. route today from San Francisco W. O. West, physicians o investigate a mysterious fire UP here last night which damaged said today, probably owed his hree stores and caused a loss eyesight to quick thinking and n excess of $12 000. Fire Chief mechanical ingenuity. When .steel .shavings were Walter S. Knight announced tr- hurled into his eyes by tools he was usmg, he constructed a powerful magnet from parts at and hand, working blindly passed it near his eyeballs. The shavings flew to the divorce Ruit was climaxed today magnet, and West went to a bv a new romance for Ethel hospital, where physicians said McLaren. his prompt action had saved Hanna Catherwood voted the prettiest girl in the him great agony and probably 1928 Olympic games. his sight. Nibley will VV. return Sunday to the community which the noted church leader left in the late eighties. Following funeral services, in the tabernacle in Salt Lake City Sunday at 11 a. m., the body will be brought to bot-whi- ch i ,n S?N Brigham Ijiiii FINANCE ESCAPES PHOENIX. Ariz.. Dec. 12. Be in Logan THREE POINTS BALTIMORE. Md Dec. 12 u oi Miss Jane Adams. 71 year old Nobel Peace prize winner was State. September UTAH I or charced with murdering his football Mountain struggled on today at nual meeting in a vigorous fort to complete a 1932 gridiron schedule It was a typical football session There were grumblings bparcj frbm t,be smaller schools, there a as much competition foi games at pay towns such as ipnVpr an(j sa.lt Lake and there were the Inevitable little groups ol mentors arranging tentative games In undertones. Gradually, however, the schedule blackboard was filled up At noon today the following games had been tentatively arranged: University of Utah: Southern California at Los Angeles, Sept 24; Colorado College at Salt Lake, Oct. 1; Brigham Yourfg, Oct. 15; Utah Aggies at Salt Lake, Oct. 29; Colorado U. at Boulder. Nov. 5; Denver U. at f . T General Church Authorities' Complete Plans For Funeral Program In Tabernacle Planes Seek Seventh In Salt Lake City Man Freed Ily to wife by drowning her. Lake, Nov. 12 and Colorado Aggies at Denver. Nov. 19. - JAIL BREAK! Ireak of Dr. Elisha Kent University of SET TENT 12 NEW YORK. Dec. 12 wide break in Japanese OKF.II Dee. 12 SeI7f 32 A committee recently named Investigate conditions at Boul- der C.tv, near Hoover dam. re-- 1 portPd today that there weie no grounds for criticism of wor j LEAVENWORTH, Kan., Dec 12 '1 lng conditions there. Army airplanes circled lover northeastern Kansas today, GETS LIFE seeking a seventh convict still at AUGUSTA. Oa , Dec. 12. (UP' large after a sensational break Rev. J. M. Williams was con- - from the Leavenworth federal vlcted on charges of murdering prison in which Warden T H his son. Raford Grady Williams, White was kidnaped and woum pharmacists mate, U. S. N., and ed.Prison sentenced to life imprisonment guards, soldiers and in Richmond county superior deputy sheriffs on foot and In automobiles aided in the hunt court today. for Earl Thayer, 65, the fugitive convict. SENTENCED TO HANG Three of the escaped prisoners Dec. CLARKSBURG. W. Va were captured and returned to 12. Harrv F. Powers, convicted the prison, one of them woundfor the Bluebeard killing of ed. Mrs. Dorothy Lemke. Northboro, Mass., was sentenced to hang THREE MEET DEATH Friday. March 18, 1932. by Judge IN HOUSE John C. Southern today. Three others met death in a farmhouse in Leavenworth YOUTH SUICIDES county where they turned at hay to fight it out with their BOISE, Idaho. Dec. 12. ;ur ,ent oysr Ul health. V' al pursuers. ter 8. swan, 23 Boise youth Warden White lay in Leavenwent to his room Friday night worth hospital today with his and shot himself through the left arm shattered by slugs from a shotgun in the hands of one head. of the convicts. IS EXECUTED After an emergency operation, CANON CITY, Dec. 12. tU.H) believed it would not James V. Foster, wizened little physicians necessary to amputate the patent medicine salesman, died be on the gallows of the state arm. Meanwhile, within the prison pentltentiary here last night. agents for the department of Justice and members of the HEAVY BOY DIES penitentiary staff conducted a SALEM Mass., Dec. 12. (UP) secret investigation seeking to only eight learn details of the plot that led George Tetrault, 200 old but weighing years to the break. oounds, died of pneumonia at PROBE CENTERS ON his parents home here at Salt The Weather 1 a shoreless current stretching ahead and back into the blackness of eternity, Vt is .a nice, eomfotriug idea that,, if we will just drift along as best we can, some day we shall turn up in a sale cove somewhere; and that then we shall have to repair our economic cratt. " Fair tonight and Sunday; little change in temperature. IDAHO Fair tonight and Jtonday but snow late tonight Cw Sunday in northern portion; continued cold. Maximum temperature Friday, 30; one year ago, 29. Minimum temperature last night, II; one year ago, g. 12 (UP) second blizzard swept the Saa Juan basin today, starting a lew hours after the enu j of a three day snow storm that nad broken ail tune weather records in the brief lull between the storms, railroad crews, with giant rotary snow plows, buck- ed their way to two stalled Denver and Rio Grande passenger trams between here and Alamosa and brought the trams into Durango. Railroad travel was abandoned again tedav when tire new bliz-- ! zard struck. The right of way which had been cleared of snow by the plows, filled again rapidly as the wind rose. Roads which had been cleared and kept clear by weary highway crews during the fiut stonn, rapidly choked with snow.. Stockmen who leared heavy losses of cattle and sheep from the first storm, were doubly worried as the blizzard increased steadily today 5nd showed no sign of any immed.ate letup. A An embryonic wnile the bandits took and fish from Lear money, jewelry overcoats. There is a lesson in preparedness there. If the 600 passengers had been armed, the twelve bandits would have held up some other train. (he Territory CONDITIONS LOS ANGELES. Short Graveside FEDERAL IN members of the crew of the German steam trawler Venus were drowned when the trawler was wrecked in bad weather north of Floro, Lloyds agent at Bergen reported today. a; vengeance. iSSINC ONE 2 p. m Interment will be in Providence Mr. Baxter was born in Providence, October 13, 1900, the son of Alex and Emily Checketts Baxter. He lived in Cache Valley practically all of his life until moving to Butte four years ago, While here. Mr. Baxter was prominent in musical circles. He was a memoer of the Bluebird orchestra for several years and 'also conducted a studio in the Thatcher Music company store, His parents are both dead, Surviving are the following brothers and sisters: Mrs. Myrtle Hunter and Rey Baxter, Logan; Alec Baxter, Grand Junction, Colorado; Mrs. Mae Anderson. Providence; Mrs- Lillian Eggles-- 1 ton and Del Baxter, Cornish. - Chinese Boycott Of Japanese Goods On WASHINGTON, Dec. 12 (U.R) With the military phase of the Manchurian situation apparently ended, observers here are turning their attention to the effects of Chinas partial boycott of Japanese goods on the island's economic life. When Japanese troops moved out of the south Manchurian railway treaty zone two months ago and occupied a number of Chinese towns, China retaliated with its classic weapon, the boycott- Reports from the far east indicated a drop in Japanese exports to China. - NEW YORK, Dec, 12. Culbertsons proach-forcin- U two-dem- ar g system-din- in Contract bridg' ting the tar knocked t If the Culbertson-Le- o which goes into its'fif tonight. Is a criterio' Thats not all: nose was almost pui lng one rubber last 8idney 8. Lenz 1 Jacoby, playing the' clal system, laid d rage of aces and f night 8 session wh' overwhelming the When time wa end of the 28th n Jacoby, leading forcers by 5650 happy as a pai who had Just sr ing fire by rr I gether. Plan Rec Aid M WASHINGT Chairman Jo, of the irrig tion comml in the sena reclamation In the w Meade, it a The Mea individual n ments frorr and reclam; allowed at t secretary of J |