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Show V Give Your Mailman a Helping Hand The Sto.ms ahead lor "King Andrew of Alumina. Page one, columns seven and eight. Volume 22. Number Remove the Snow From Your Sidewalks Herald- - With which are combined the ('ache Valley Daily Herald, the LOGAN, 10. UTAH.WKDN DSD Journal Daily A V. and Ib-ial- JANTA 1H 10 1.1. By I Price 5 Cents. h Storms P til Ahead Arthur Brisbane biles? The Baby Gains, Loses. Some Things Settled. Japan Needs, And Takes. It is fortunate for the United States, where new, amazingly and low beautiful, efficient are now priced automobiles shown, that we did not get with along alcoholic prohibition. It would have been possible, at least for Sundays, in the Puritan days, or for Saturdays, among Orthodox Jews, not allowed to ride on the Sabbath. Automobile ownprs now pay in taxes one thousand million dollars a year, over and above the cost of their machines. The gasoline tax alon; amounts to This five hundred million.",. makes the proposed tax of 5 per cent on new automooiles sound particularly foolish. To discourage tire automobile industry, already carrying the heaviest load in America, means to threaten the employment of more than two million men. Wall Street and stock specuout Monday lators started cheered by the fact that in four days of last week the value of stocks went up three thousand million dollars. . 'The big telegraph and telephone company anns went up in value one hundred end Uglny six millions. But what's the use of having the baby gain three ounces one week. If it loses five the next. That WaU " Street baby is very uncertain. However, it is going to live, and be a big strong man and those that are selling their stocks dose to "absolute zero will feel foolish some clay. A few things are settled, many has paid all the reparations she intends to pay. Paris but will get used is perturbed France. to the perturbation. England and others will announce that, since Germany wont pay them, they wont pay us. We may now charge off ten billions that Uncle Sain threw out of the window in a sloppy, sentimental mood. Cache Canneries Operation Awaits Definite Decision CDMMITTEESENR0LLMENf rni n imc flashes 1 ATCOLLEGE More important are She thiity-fiv- e thousand million private dollars that this country has sent to foreign countiies in addition to the nation's ten bil-- t lions. How much of the thirty five billions will come back? Cyrus H. K. Curtis .discovers that Germany owes the UnUed -- States, in private loans, four thousand millions, about $35 to every man, woman and child in the United States, just about the total amount of money now in circulation here. What is our chance of getting all or any of that money, with the Nazis, Communists, and Nationalists fighting the German republic? What is happening in Germany interests us more than anything in Manchuria. That Asiatic treasure house need not agitate us or the state department. Japan is only doing in Manchuria what the United States did When it took We deTexas from Mexico. cided that we wanted Texas and that we could make better use of it than the Mexicans. Japan lacks room to expand, with seventy millions crowded In her little Islands and Korea. There is plenty of room in Manchuria. Japan needs iron and coal. The learned Japanese. Jotaro Yamamoto, estimates the iron In Manchuria at one thousand five hundred million tons and the coal near the iron at on c billion tons. Who wouldn't take that? Does anybody imagine that mild remonstrances from Washington could change Japans plan? lieves. Your system of government is slow and cumbersome and apparently cannot be changed, Angell said. It is a century be- Before Definite Announcement PALM SPRINGS, Calif. fore a cowd 111 his interest In the music. He took no notice of applause, but smiled at members of the trio playing during the dinner hour and suggested we play some more. He refused to a play French song, saying, "no, no; that sentimental." is too FUTURE VOICED Conf.deuce in the future as regards business conditions in Cache valley and over the country as a whole was expressed by President John H. Andvrson of the First National bank in his report to the bank s stockholders at their annual meeting Tuesday night. President Anderson and o'1 rs of the bank's officers and were reelected. The are: L. S. Smart, first vice . r G dent; Alma Sonne, vice president and cashier; L. Wester-holassistant cashier; John E. Olson, trust officer Directors are: Messrs. Anderson. Smart and Sonne. Dr. I. P. Stewart. John Quayle S. F. Bal-li- f. O. L. Peterson and C. R. Spencer. The First National bank was organized 40 years ago. During this period. President Anderson said, the institution has been operated on a profitable and conservative basis It has never failed to pay a dividend to Us stockholders. Officials of the bank take pride, he said, in 'ins rec-rdThe bank faces the future w ilh entire confidence. ' j j Whether or not the pea and bean canning plants of the Utah Packing coiporation will oper-- -; ate in Cache valley' next summvr will not be definitely known for about thirty days. Manager Roland Wadsworth ot the Utah Packing corpora- tion so informed a joint com- mittee of the Cache County Pea the Growers association and Logan Chamber of Commerce which mot with him in Ins office at Ogden Tuesday. Some canning factories of th company in Utah will likely opeiate. but just which ones will have to be determined wi'h-11- 1 the next month, said Mr Wadsworth. Tlie committees were given a courteous reception, according to members who made the ti ip An expression of appreciation for what the local Chamber of Commerce did last year 111 spon-- I soring the pea and bean paign for more consumption in Cache valley was made by Manager Wadsworth. The joint committees on their return to Logan Tuesday night that expressed the feeling Manager Wadsworth will be zealous in working for a fu!l campaign in Cache valleyof next the summer for operation canneries. The committees will keep in close touch with tne situation and use every effort to see th it the canning fac'ones operate this season. Many of the far.nen are veiv desirous of raising peas and bans this vear. Chelrma.i V the Cache W. Chambers of County Pea Growers associavith the tion reports that amount of moisture In the ground and the water shed and hat with the cool cvemngs will likely prevail because of the amount of snow in th; mountains. that this should make an ideal reason for tiv ',r jwi:i peas cam- j . . SALT LAKE CITY. Jan. 13. An indignant state bank W. H. Hadlock. was today attempting to trace the source of rumors which. he claimed, compelled the clo- UR sure yesterday of the Farmer Merchants bank of Provo The state official character- a as NEGROES KILLED ized the Provo bank TUSCALOOSA. Ain.. Jan 13 financial institution ' illPJ Ten negroes were k.lled m added that malicious and a tornado which struck the vi- unfounded reports of its 111Mound-sviHeM. . last solvencv were the sole cause of cinity of night, the Alabama Great Sou- its downfall. thern railroad telegrapher there Withdrawals were carried on k over a reported today period , the Fall quarter. The total cumulative enrollment for the ve.ar 1931.32 is ,10w close to 1000. total ever reached. ti.Xhehighest mno mink was exceeded for the first time in the year 1929-2- 7 when the emolfment for that vear inn eased It per cent over the vear before. Since that time it has increased at about the rat" of 100 a year This steadv inneuse lias been regular in suite of economic factors which ordinarily arc supposed to keu students from attending school During the p 1st few years U has been necessary to add srv-einew departments to the Institution and extend existing ones because of the increased number and the high standing the college has attained among other institutions of higher learning. Notable among these this year is the new Child Development department, and the Forestry and Biology and Dramatic Arts departments, whose teaching staffs have been in-eased and curriculums enlarged. Many new classes in other fields have also been addal ed. T LICENSE License to operate Allen's arena on West Center street for the promotion of boxing and wrestling exhibitions was granted to Dick Quinney by the city commission Tuesday night. A license fee of two and onc-haper cent of the receipts from each exhibition wall be charged, the comm.ssion voted. Mr. Quinney recently took over the arena interests of J C. Allen. Jr.. Ira Dern and Elam Cronquist. No boxing and wrestling matches have been promoted in Logan since before Thanksgiving in November when the arena opened for a brief run under the management of Nil Christiansen. Promoter Quinney has no n- nounced his intentions relative t0 the Pr?r,3m of the orena n he wrest In.g and ms SP0UThe local Post No 7 of the American Legion voted last week that it would not partici-- 1 wrest-and anv and boxing pate in hng exhib.tions in the role of promoter Mr. Quinncy's opera lions will be entirely Indcpen-"splcndi- d d cut of any other person1-- ' or gunizationx lf - -- or-an- Janus J. formerly ot Ioyola umvcisity now of Gonaga uimcisity, Spokane, Wash had tinned down a fortune m loyalties on a hair pio-duc- Blizzards Sweep To Eastward Over RUSH Mellon Gives Plan To ROOM Jan 13 1UP1 House Committee A (Nuns Wnglit travelaii hi aung an ' Oxygen room l.ine Rockies Today wliuli iilivsieians at Tucson Am m i lie neee,viry to s.i aid Alice Htdi.ud 25, through a WASHINGTON. Jan 12 'UPi -A sudden cold wave settled 011t1r.1l stage id pneumonia, Tlie admmi. trillion's program down over Cache valley Tuestook olt line at 7 a m for levying nearly $1,000,009,000 day night as the skics' cleared if added taxes in an emergency following a 24 hour ,toim that JOHN ADO KILLS lfort to balance tlie national left nearly a foot oi new fallen ABERDEEN Miss, Jail 13 budget was laid before the house snow on the ground r' A tornado which swept way and means committee today Although the mercuiy failed over eastern last bv Secretary of Treasury Melto reach zero during the night, night killed al Mississippi least one lon It d.d not climb much on Wedand mimed Unity 01 mo'-eThe seentary. following out nesday and predictions weie ja piGnnmary cluck here tn.s eaihcr recommendations to freely made that sub zero tem- trail d todav congress, advocated a return to peratures would be ielt Wednesthe income tax rales of 1924 day night. COMPANIES ( OMBINE and the imposition of new speAll main traveled roads wine NEW YORK 13. n taxes on automobiles, theaeither open or being Geared of Consolidation otJanthe S.nclulr cial ter ickets. telephone and telesnow Wednesday. The mam Cuiv ohdated Oil messages, Corporation, stamps and north-sout- h highway through Prairie Pipe Line company, and graph other items. the valley was clear ol snuv and Pran le Oil te Gas company, inESTIMATE MADE the Sardine canyon v.a in good to a $532 000.000 unit was com- OF INCREASES condition once more rlso. pleted today For the fiscal year beginning next Ju y. Mellon estimated the DENVER. Jan. 13. u i'i A SLAIN GIKI, Increased and new taxes he prospectacular midwinter blizzard Pa.. Jail 13 HARRISBURG, would yield additional cjfjsed in the Rocky Mountains 'UP - It was reported here that posed today after destructive winds a daughter of Dr. Asa Ilickok revenue as fallows; caused widespread damage m Higher taxes on individual doctor at the Rockvifw $183,000,000. Nevada and Coloiado yesterday, prison state penitentiary, had been and, gathering force, killed 12 slam today on grounds of the High tax on corporate as they swept eastwaid. $00,000,000. prison, near Bcllcfonte, by a The blizzard, threatened to b? com id tax on estates, Super the major storm of th? seas 1.. WaIts fury was felt from the REACHES S.UtTY Higher tax on tobacco bash valley to the west coast. PLAINS. Mont . Jan. 13. a i It will be colder tonight, After three days wandering Realty transfers, $15,000,000. predicted J. M. Sherier, chief of through the sub-zeio stretches the United States weather bur- of Stock transfers, $15,000,000. Swamp, Tom Kenson, eau. in eastern Montana. Wy- 23, Cedar Automobiles and accessories, was oming, Colorado, New Mexico. cuers carried to safety by res- $121,000,000. today. Arizona and southern Utah, Theater tickets. $135.000 000. with a severe cold wave in ColoRadio and phonographs, 0 FAIL HINDUS iado, northern and eastern New 000. BELLE PLAINS, Kan . 13. Jail. Mexico, and southeastern Utah mesTelephone and and a moderate cold wave 111 op -- Three bandits seized this sages. $55,000,000. telegraph village today bound and gagged eastern and central Arizona Checks and drafts, $95,000,000 the the night marshal, cut all outHeavy snows ungulfed Increased postal revenue, $150, irwhes telephone 011c but mountains. Insuring plentiful going 000.000. and a made water. to vain attempt Frigid blasts rigation Total. $920,000 000. curtailed outdoor activity, as break into the Valley State The proposed income tax the mercury slumped to zero bank. schedule would remnrr payments nd below. bv all single individuals earn1)1 I I'.NSE RESTS LLINT. M eli Jan 13 l h-- The ing more than $1000 and bv ind defense its case in all married persons with an COOPERATIVE the minder trial of Helen Joy come over $2500 An additional alMorgan lieie today immediately exemption of $400 would be lowed for each dependent after couit opened SMAI.II.lt INCOMES COLL MBL'S O I 11 perl-01, r- I) ANDREW W. MELLON Secretary of the Treasury Andrew W. Mellon, commonly called King Andrew of Alumina by reason of hl.s heavy private interests, faces stormy seas. Today, Just a short tune after he handed himself a tax refund totalling nearly $100,000. he presented congress with a schedule of tax increases, most of them falling on the common people, totalling $920,000,000. 1 I drew faces impeachment charges brought by Rep. Patman of Texas. Mellon, according to Patman, Is engaged In private business contrary to a statute which dates from 1789. j ic-te- NEARS BRINK HONOLULU. T rt. Jail 'Copyright. 1932. Uniled Press' Jan 13 'UP' unprecedented parley here between railroad labor and capital finds both sides agreed upon a temporary wage cut to "save Uie railroads They agree also tnat there must be greatl" increased employment to "save the raihoad man." The 1.900 000 railroad workers will accept voluntarily a 10 per cent slash m their pay, the United Press has learned from an unimpeachable source, in ex-- ! change for the promise on the part of tlie railroads to put as many of their 500.000 unemploy-- ! ed workers a? they can back on their jobs. CHICAGO 13 'UP' -- SALT LAKE UP) - Jan. marketing CITY. Cooperative wool has proved a Godsend sheepmen m a time of Hawa.i.s teriitonal government. shaken by the "honor" 13 murder ol a young native that of climaxed a wave ol terrorism to was on the bunk oi levomtion-iry dischanges demanded by an aroused populace today. be- tress This statement was made fore the convention of the National Wool Growers asociation Paul by Draper, of Draper & Co marketing agent for the National Wool Marketing corporation I am absolutely convinced " he exclaimed, that no individual could have sold his woul at prices which have pi evaded unless there had been the stabilizing effect of the National Wool Marketing corporation 'As individuals, the sheepmen would have been compelled to accept a p.ce sen ml lent-a pound under uliat the due to cooperative 111.11 keting " sixty-seven- th . , OWNERS MEET c this list fail to a candidate upon whom immediate agreement can b reached the president probably will confer personally with the most likely of the lot. The name of Calvin Coolidge was particularly intriguing to There many in Washington. woud be ample precedent for the appointment of a former piesidcnt as William Howard Taft, served several years on the court It was also pointed oat that hU appointment might answer tlie perennial question of what to do with Coolidge di.rnverv -- two-wee- Should f U that CHS MADE I BY LEGISLATOR $20,-00- 1- Supreme Court Candidate IOR1TM. Gilmoic. S A . Coolidge Seen As Likely Kill Sis .OS ANGH.ES Jan. 13 Fi lends today rev call'd I For the fust time in the history of the Utah State Agricultural college the enrollment of students for any one Quarter has exceeded the 1400 mark. This number is a large increase nver the total registration lor Will Need Thirty Day hind the times. But I dont expect America to take my advice, lie said. Any American intelligent enough to be a dictator and lead the United States out of economic difficulty would be stoned to death by his people. 'I o Dr Jan. 13 Albert noted German Einstein, scientist, jo.ncd the orchestra at a hotel here last night, taking over a violin and playing with them several selections trom Bach, Mozart and Beethoven. Usually bashful, the investigator of the universe forgot his backwardness be- RECORD E the times and needs an inSir telligent dictatorship. Norman British Angell. statesman and writer, be- WASHINGTON, Jan 13 (UP' President Hoovei today began going over the roster of leading members of the American bar and ludiciary for a successor UTAH. Snow tonight, colder to Oliver Wendell Holmes 111 south, severe cold wave south- the Supreme Court Justice Holmes resigned yeseast portion: Thursday unsetHe gave declining terday. tled. continued cold. as Ins reason He will" IDHO: Fair tonight except health 91 in March. in southeast snows portion: be Mr. Hoover at once set about Thursday generally fair but becoming cloudy in north por- seeking a man of sufficient calibre to nominate for this tion; continued temperature Tues- high office. The United Piess learned authoritatively that a day. 27; one year ago, 32. is Minimum temperature last list of possibilities being rirawTi up for his consideration. night, 6; one year ago, 17. The Weather SETS Nl.i:i DICTATOR CHICAGO. Jan. 13. tU.Ri America is 109 years behind Ger- JX KOI tCopyright, 1930 More Tax For Automo- , FIVE OCLOCK 2. I Today "Politics is the only game where there is no honor among thieves. Edgar Wallace. .lournal lie 1 What Folks Say NEW YORK. Jail 13 Stocks soared one to mort 'hn. six points todav sot . iglu for tlie yi.tr and aided m..n millions to the vabutiou 01 listed shall s Tod. iv s unu, it inn a,i-bv the fed'! d r'srrve wlmh out del. nit' iv i i.n ea-a mnvi moi.i v police-- w Inch Unit a! l,e pi ea , I -- Lr-msh- si i Slab's goveriiini v am mg up to 3 u .) pom m . , d . Prepare Funeral For Utah Family Killed in Flames A sad MYTON. Jan 13 l'P dened farm community gazed on the snow covered turns of a burned farm house and prepai ed to attend services for an entire family of six It was this ranch 110111'' that was the funeral pyre of the George Myler, Jr., family yesterday wife and Mvler, his four children, Chlford. 6. Thel4 ma. Doris. 2 and Cloiis. three months, were trapped 111 the residence and burned to death Frantic neighbors could not penetrate the barrier of flames. !S foie then eyes A (laslud in lUii tlie walls the few rool minute fell and uisidi Uiev the iluired bodies of the victims The fire ongmated fiom an t xplosion In a stove Myler apparently had attempted to start pm-rive- 'hr fur with kerosene A de- ton. Umn oecut red, blowing out half the stove and apparently stunning the entire family. The fire cunekly spread. Death was mev itable No inquest will be field Funeral services were being arranged today. WASHINGTON, Jar.. 13. Rep. Patman, Deni., Texas, charged before the Louse judi-- 1 ciary committee today that Secretary of Treasury Mellon .was actively engaged in or.vate business contrary to a statute which dates from 173?. j Patman made his charge in on ins opening the hcarm impeachment irsolution against the eld"rly and wealthy cabinet member. He lead a deposition by Mel- Ion, made in 192, m which MelARE TAXED lon told of a meeting ot the On the first $4000 n f tax mi" Canadian aluminum interests held by Duke and the Aluminum income the tax would bp Company of America. percent instead of the per cent On the next $4000 it would be four per rent of the present three per rent on taxable income above 8000 the normal rate would be six per cent In addition surtaxes ramaug up to 37 per cent would be levCHECK ON TAX ied on incomes from $10 000 to O11 mo 200 000 of incomes than $500 000 the tax would reach a maximum of 40 p- -r PRESTON--I'keeping with cent sugge-Lon- s of the Idaho State Tlie pioposcd evasions would ,Chamber of Commeice otficials, bring back into tile tcxoaimg the Piesion Gub is about 0 700 000' some croup organize a tax investigation Fven so, committee Mellon sid . f : ni county, our hieome tax law would stdl Edwin Crv".:. p .ulmt of cmain a tax naid by reiatley tne local c.ua is uner. ng the few individuals 01 gaiii7.u an jiu. iiopes to conThe seeirtjrv eninhusied ttv duct a ( .uno.neii Dial will be idvis.ibilitv of balancing ih instruct, u .,nd giv jiossibie budget m tin next fiscal ear 'cans ot u'duc.ne all unneces-ar- y He estimded the treasury d levies vear endto' for til" ti.-.The local group expect ta June 30 at $2 123 000 000 and make a thorough investigation s.ud this would cause ,ui i of leal cjunty chool and crease of $1500 000 000 11 th city gov ei n'lienl.s vviti an idea public debt .1 appi'in? t'le axe and reII tv 1 ) i Ilf, ducing the load earned by tax MANY MW OM S pavers By inlisting the support of v 111 every faction in the county, But coincident 'th he hope to leach an unpre- reisis their most be iral ere unv result which will bene-t- it in government expendi" tures. Mellon warned Mumty taxpayers. The Idaho Chamber of Com- - j In addition to raising the tax it is itn- - nierce will send out forms to 'n irgerto incomesa new be used in a survey and meet-tnan drift D'u'ptive will be conducted all over of federal taxpaveis he held "Manx not now taxed are veiv the county detmilelv O a position o make t LIBBED TO DE.AIII some rontiibut.un to tin supWASHINGTON. Jan. 13 port of the government They .'Two women, identified as Mrs. should be asked to do so ' We aie in the mulst of a Agnes Illsley of New York and It is essen- her maid, a Mrs. Bruckner, were & grave emergence tial to raise additional revenue, found clubbed to death about not just to cover current ex- 9 a m. today at Mrs. Illsleys penditures but to maintain un- home at Middleburg. Va., ac- impaired tlie credit of the Unit- cording to word telephoned ta ed States government. . Washington. to 1 n 1 , j -- 1 1 gs . I j 5 |