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Show sr f .1 The HeraM Joiimal UNCLE SAMS AIDS aowEP Herald-Journa- Volume 23. & UK. WM. A. TAYLOR Chief, Bureau of riant Industry, II. 8. Department of Agriculture. Celebration of the bicentennial of Washington's birth has turned the minds of many gardeners to e or colonial garden the garsomething like Washington's den." By Grow Yesteryears Blooms Today we have many improved varieties, and many plants- unfamiliar to the colonists, but seedsmen even before the Revolution were offering many flowers and plants popular today. In the spring of 1760 the followmany among ing were listed others: French and African marilupines, golds, several lobelia, larkspur, white and yellow chrysanthemums, snappeas, hollyhocks, dragon, sweet several poppies and mallows. Globe valerian amaranthus, everlasting, primroses, Canterbury bells, several pinks, columbine, sweet rocket and ranunculus, gladiolus, honesty, and "50 different sorts of Gardeners mixed Tulip Roots. today may find inspiration in such not indoes a list, even though it clude many plants now listed. - scabi-ouse- ," sweet-Willia- the gar- HOSTILITIES PUTT Geneva The Japanese terms for an arn.Vtice in Shanghai are Inaceeptable, absolutely W. W. Yen, Chinese delegate to the league, announced today. Aeceptane of the terms would be tantamount to aurrender, Copyright By United Press) SHANGHAI. Mar 4 I Friday) Both Chinese and Japanese have ordered a cessation of hostilities at Shanghai pending an outcome of the League assembly at Geneva and other peace negotiations. After a month of warfare which cost thousands of lives and left part of Shanghai and the surrounding countryside in smolder-'IJVip- e ruins, the Chinese army was Withdrawn completely from around The city and an armed truce existed. Chinese authorities cabled their they representatives at Geneva had ordered hostilities ceased, alJapan though they contended, fnok an unfair advantage after which the Chinese withdrawal, was intended to facilitate peace negotiations. The Chinese, the message said, are foregoing their rights to attempt immediate recovery of the evacuated area. A REPORTER DETECTIVE JACKSON, Mich, Mar. 3. tin When Mernt C. Aten, recently appointed inspector of detectives here, makes out a report to superior officers, it may read thus: 'The bullet torn body of an unidentified her clothes woman, splashed with blood, was found in a lonely section, etc." Aten is a former newspaper reporter, noted for his ability to assist police in the solution of crimes. Arthur Brisbane Little Truce. NGi Feels Better. Where Was Its Soul? A More Cattle ARE CHOSEN Names Listed For Next President lor Russia. Four has The League of Nations learned that Japan and China have agreed on a "conditional truce, a temporary agreement to withdraw troops from firing lines while the head men talk it over. The late Jerry Dunne, whon bad man" in New York every feared, used to say, "When two men fight, they both want to run away. If you don't want to run you will win." In this Asiatic fight both have seemed inclined to run, almost from the start When China declined to lie down and be steppe, on in good old "David and Goliath" style, Japan felt China was n't playing the game. Also Japan learns that Russia is thousand massing one hundred troops on the Manchurian border, and is intelligent enough to know that if she fought Russia now sh would meet a different Russia from the one she met twenty-eigh- t years ago under the czar If the Japanese thought they hao to meet modern Russia they woulo prefer to get the Chinese problem off their minds first. Sept. 8 .631-2.6- 3 .63 8 .62 .bl 8 .61 8 .64 2 .64 2 4 .35 2 Herald and The Journal 1 ! FIVE OCLOCK EDITION 3 2. Butler Prices L No Clues Found As To Program Is Complete For Founders Day Whereabouts Of Famous Babe March HOPEWELL, N. J.. Mar 3 il'fh Col. Charles A. Lindbergh and his wife, tortured by many anxious hours, waited vainly today in their one-fift- h 'r, C D N'Ui, the Washington, gorilla, suffering from pneumonia, was better yesterday, thanks to an "oxygen chamber" provided for his use by Mrs. Eleanor Pal tenon, editor of the Washington Herald. He ate three bananas, a pear, part of an apple, half of a normal grape fruit, almost a lf , breakfast. - Young N'Gi, although six years still a baby. Gorillas, like old. ourselves, mature slowly. His "oxygen chamber" was a simple affair of canvas, for temporary use from His apparent recovery pneumonia has done good by arousing interest in the use oi oxygen chambers in hospitals. Also the gorilla's recovery is good thing for the education ot children that study the strange animal, with deep interest. Mrs. Patterson, who, three years ago, gave a whole ward in the Washington emergency hospital dedicated to the poor, in memory of her husband, has now given to the Washington emergency hospital a permanent oxygen chamber of glass, big enough to care for three persons at one time. She suggested a year ago that the emergency hospital should have such a chamber, but funds, apparently.. were lacking. Now she it. A similar chamber like :hose used by the Rockefeller institute and the Mayo brothers, has been ordered by the Children's hospital in Washington. In a Boston alley, a baby was found with a wash cloth over its face, a cord around its neck, black and rigid. None the less, Dr. Frank M. Deich, night superintendent of Boston city hospital, put the baby on the operating table, and began breathing into its mouth, forcing air into Its lungs. Twenty doctors took turns, forcing air into the babys lungs, for three hours, and now the child, pronounced dead, is restored to life, breathing comfortably in an incubator. Most interesting, all honor to the kind hearted doctors, you ask yourself: "Where was the SOUL of that baby during the three hours of apparent death? Had it not yet left the body, or was it hovering around in the neighborhood. waiting to come hark in rase life should start again?" Robert P. Lamont, Jr., son of our secretary of commerce, has been invited to go to Russia and show the Soviet government how to reorganize and improve of rattle Young Mr l.amnnt will visit Moscow to look the iob over, murh interested, not In the $50,000 salary said to be nffered, but In the problem. Russia, with 160,000, ono population. has 35,000,000 beef cattle, 17. This country has 000.000 Rheep. beef cattle. 60,000, noo 65,000,000 sheep. Russia wisely wants her people to eat 100 lbs. of meat each a year, which Is the American ration. Young Mr. Lamont raises white-fareHerefords on a 15.000 neie and cattle ranch in Colorado thinks the Russian job could he don in about 20 years. Russia's government may he all that our "best minds" say it is. but it shows an amount of intelligence In tackling its problems not conspicuous in some other counWhen it hasn't GOT a tries. thing, it tries to get it, and when it doesn't KNOW a thing, it tries to learn it. d ' Logan Host To Bottlers - Laundry Route Man Slips, Breaks Leg Bring hack our bahy That is til plea that Col. and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh are making for the return of their 26 months old son, stolen from his crib in the Lindbergh home as he slept on Tuesday night. Ami the plea is echoed from file hearts of millions of mothers and fathers throughout the I nited States and (lie remainder of the world as the search for fhe missing child spreads through the nation. y JURY Given At County Meeting Alex TiireoH, who Mibuni'eif to an operDlmn at a loud hocpilaj for a fractured i oai bone he suffered, nr addition in nlber injuries in an autornobdp cre.h. is one-eigh- th Recovers Lost Horse After Two Years Hyrum-Wellsvill- t'i ording f iruf m Pmii dnm i, d , to another Ilyrum committee which appeared before the commissioners ou February 17 and declared the above designated route had been suggested to the county commissioners afjer the wishes of Ibe people at the mass meeting had been misrepresented The eoramittee appearing before the commissioners on February 17 a desire to have the of- - expressed inver1 'Rating road turn north from the Ilyrum Third ward chapel, thence west badly to Wellsville. This is the present route of the highway. Mr Israclseu averred that no pressure had been bi ought to bear on any Ilyrum residents or county officials to have the route changed. hut that the sentiment of the mass meeting was unanimous for the new route around the high si hool thence north and west to Lady Luck Forgets The Depression; Maybe Youll Get A Visit From Her SACRAMENTO, Calif., Mar. Lady Luck seems to be skipping around the country yet depression or no depression. That she has a smile to bestow here and there seems to he the only logical conclusion in view of a series of events rein northern California cently. C. J. Roiph, Grass valley farmer, was filled with dismay last summer when a forest fire swept across his ranch and left blackened acres. In cleaning up the debris re-- c e n t I y, Roiph, Ironically enough, discovered a ledge of S.(U.R pure chrysolite asbestos. Fur- ther investigation revealed the ledge to be of considerable size and Roiph believes com-merlc- production may be possible. The next flashing smile of the mythical lady was seen in the historic mining town of Cherokee, when Spencer Clinging, veteran prospector, saw a glow in the sand at his feet. The glow proved to be a flawleas diamond, weighing apof proximately a carat In the rough. Records show the gem to be the 451st diamond to have been found In this mining territory. three-quarte- rs Another side to a dispute over the routing of the state secondary highway from Logan to Hyrum, thence to Wellsville was heard by the Cache county commissioners The county fathers Wednesday were chiefly occupied with road matters during the entire session. Heading a committee of Hyrum residents. Postmaster John A Israelsen of Hyrum told the commissioners, residents of the locali-1- v at a mass meeting last summer had decided in favor of the route running due west from the U yru road, on through Hyrum, past the outh Cache high school, thence north and west to Wellsville. He reforred i ON SATURDAY if -- Ami then there was Imti tier in 1 lino who had the tur-le- s for sale. A woman it rd purchased nne of the foul and had discovered set era I nuggets and flakes of gold in tile turds craw. She told the hul her. The lints her told no one until he had done a little prospecting" for himself. K. C. Anderson, on whose farm the turkeys were raised, is trying to find out just where those turkeys did their feeding. But better yet, Ilenry Heins, Anderson storekeeiier, gets his minted. His dog dug up a $5 gold piece. gold-read- y under Side To Dispute CRASH VICTIM OF FUNERAL HERE . Again Before County Tri-Sta- Ec-cle- Souriand mountain home for news leading to recovery of their kidnaped baby, Charles A. Jr. Gov. A. Harry Moore visited their retreat this afternoon and returned with word they bad not heard from the kidnapers today. NO NEWS FROM ANY SOURCE From within the home, the United Press received similar word of the discouraging situation. Nothing has happened," it was said definitely. Thus, the high hopes of the night that the baby would be back soon, seemed frustrated, yet Lindbergh and his wife kept their courage high. There was a rumor the governor's visit had been to discuss immunity for the kidnapers if thev would return the child unharmed. But Moore told the United Pre s at Trenton on his return from the Lindbergh estate th it luis had not been considered. The governor announced a microphone and a troopers teletype were being installed at the Lindbergh estate to aid in fast It was thought broadcasting Lindbergh might be planning to go on lue air with an appeal to the kidnapers to take their ransom and give back to the saddened parents, the son who was seized Tuesday evening from his crib on the secoud floor. The Lindberghs were calm but nervous and f'ainly under almost superhuman tension, AWAIT AGENT OF KIDNAPERS The ground about the Lindbergh Even In Logan, anxious borne and the leading to watchmothers and fathers an the house from the main road were cleared of visitors and reing closely for word of the porters to give clear way for most farneua la the baby any - agent ita kulawpers-to world. THb - Hrnild Jsirrmfr make th.ir way to the Lindbergh Wednesday and Thursday, replace. But no fresh word came, ceived al.nost a constant though dur'ng the night there stream of telephone queries been wod that Lindbergh was had for latest news of the missing confident of quick return of the bahy. baby after contacting the kidThis news, received from the napers. United Press, the greatest af"I went out to the Lindheigh ternoon news fathering agency home to see if everything was in the world, was freely glvtn. being done that possibly could be doT-Gov. Moore told the United Pi ess. "I saw Col. and Mrs. Lindbergh and they expressed themselves as grateful for the manner in which things are being handled. They are bearing up wonderfully the strain. Colonel 7 Lindbergh bas not heard from the kidnapers todey. Moore said the police were going on the theory that two men worked directly on the kidnaping. New Hyrum Road Route Is Convention Word has been received in Isigan of the death, in San Iedro Monday, of Mrs. G. W. Ingram Mrs. Ingram Is the daughter of Mrs W. H. Meaeham of Logan Death followed an operation for appendicitis. The body will be brought to Logan and funeral services will be held at Lindquist's Undertaking parlor Saturday at 2 p. m. Burial will be in Logan citv cemetery. Mrs. Ingram was born in Park Valley, Utah, in 1879. She was a lifelong worker in the L. D. S church and spent much of the latter part of her life in geneaEsli Jensen, east side rout-- ' logical work. Surviving are her men for the Loean Lauc dr'- an-mother, five brothers, three sisters, Drv Cleaning company. Is in a four daughters, one son and three local hospital recovering from o grandchildren. One brother, Roy Meaeham of broken ankle. Mae Mrs. sister, Mr. Jensen, who is a resident of Logan, one SAN FRANCISCO. Mar. 3. d'.I'i Millville, slipped and fell while Dunkley of Franklin, and one San Francisco butter today: 92 crossing icy ruts in the street daughter, Mrs. Merle Bright of last Preston, live in Cacha valley. 23T4. Monday. 'scors July TRESS Low Close VAINLY WAIT ASSURE WHEAT WASHINGTON, Mar. 3 it Pi 1 8 House passage of the senate bill to distribute 40,000,000 bushels of Founders' Logan Rotaruins today nominat- federal farm board wheat to des Day at the t'l ih for the respective titute humans and starving cattle State Agricultural college will be ed candidates too was assured the at filled be to ay. offices club commemorated on March 8. with annual election at the first meeta special founders' day assembly LEADS OREGON in April. The ing igeeting will be held at 11 CORVALLIS, Ore, Mar. 3. (I Pi a. m Jn the college auditorium Four names wore presented as leads the nation with Oregon cumulates for president to sucof the merchantable C. I" Olsen of Hyrum and a Dr. H. R ceed B. T. Cardon will be the ptin the timber United in States, said state legislator Mr McGee was presented by James Olsen is one ci pal speaker was G. W. Peavey, dean of forestry of Anderson Ross Norfleet, educators most thd prominent at The State three ParOregon college Dr. named by McGee; Harry in Cache valley and has always ker was nominated by II J Hatch Pacificone-ha-coast states have more been an enthusiastic backer of of the remaining was than and William Evans, state A standing timber in the country educational causes In the Drought forth by Ross Anderson musical program is also being The offices of vice president Oregon has about 40 per cent of this amount. arranged for the assembly arretary and treasurer only The Utah State Agricultural colH J one candidate each LEARNED TO FLY Hati h was nominated for vice lege was founded on March 8. 8. Mar. NATICK. Mass, (R0 1888 by action of the slate legisNorman I) Salisbury, president. After only two hours and five lature,. undpr the provisions of lie was present secretary, again minutes D. Federal Land Grant Act-o- f of dual instruction, 1862 A Jarvis named to that office L. Morton made his first solo Anlhoi H Lund introduced the jf the Utah Idaho Central rail- Leslie at Natick airport. Instruc- bill. I . flight road was nominated treasurer William Evans, Jr., is at pres- tor E. Fletcher Ingals was a bit Jeremiah .W Lanoorn, the first as worried saw he his pupil take ent vii c presub nt of the club began his duties on Janoff alone in a biplane, but Mor- president and Asa Bullen is treasurer. uary ft 1890. On September 2 the landed ion several after safely Two will lie chosen from among first rm of school opened with the following randida'cs for the minutes aloft. twenty-tw- o students registering Ar office of directors: and 8 faculty of five members Hyrum SMALL TORNADO nold, A A Finnage, FrPd Lund-bergThe first graduating class in ls.n HOUSTON, Tex, Mar. 3. IP.El was composed of six members Guy Cardon and Albeit AnTen were and persons Injured derson. The college has made an ex the several buildings were blown down The meeting was under a small tornado that eeptional record of growtn and today serby of the community direction fory-fou- r improvement in its with Emanual struck Deer Park. vice community years of existence. A cumulative He pre Skabelund in charge total of over 1600 students were NULLIFIED VERDICT the sented John H Moser as FREMONT, Neb. Mar. 3. 1U P recorded this year and a faculty speaker Richard Vincent won a $7,500 of 102 members is listed in the Mr Moser urged greater attenIts standud, catalogue. tion to various community proj- verdict in a damage suit follow- college ects for the improvident and the ing death of his wife in a car of scholarship have also made a creditable It is on accident. set District Judge Spear improvement beautification of the city Among aside the verdict on the grounds the "A" accredited list of the Asprojects that should be uiRcd he that the husband had no right to sociation of American Universities mentioned a community slaughter for damages when he was su- the highest attainable scholastic house, more tree planting, cleaner ask his rank, and students arc freely ad wife for a divorce. front and back yards, and a bet- ing mitted to advanced standing in ter approach to the college, fie FLAGGED TRAIN leading educational Institutions in also urged a greater interest in GURLEY, Neb, Mar. 3. (U.EI the United States. many young boys who at present Fred Crees, station agent, clad are wasting valuable time by in his pajamas, flagged a train loitering The difficulty of finding a park- to a stop a few inches from a FARM GROUP rail. The break was dising space in the business section broken on Saturdays' shoutd be rectified, covered a few minutes before the NAMES HEADS said Mr. Moser, He believed that midnight train arrived. Crees did if the merchants did not park not have time to dress. their own cars in front of their COAT STOLEN own or their competitors stores Election, of Merle G. Hyer as MALDEN, Mass, Mar. 3. UJ.ri there would be no problem to A coat solve. belonging to Police Com- president succeeding Victor Henmissioner Artemus B. Sweezey was dricks, and naming of other offistolen from a closet in the First cers, was the principal activity Baptist church while he was out- of a Lewiston Farm bureau loside, helping a fellow parishioner cal meeting at 2 p. m. Wednesday. push a stalled automobile. Other officers are Robert W 300 DADS ATTEND Bowman,- vice president, succeedAs ing Ira Hyerr M. D. Van Orden, DETROIT, Mar. 3. (UP) a part of Father and Son Week secretary; Saul E. Hyer, beet S. here, 300 fathers attended school growers representative; N classes with their sons at Robert Johnson, dairying representative, Burns school. The fathers sat in succeeding Amasa Hyde; Ama.sa the same desks with their sons Hyde, potato growers representaand recited lessons in reading, tive in place of Merle G. Hyer; and arithmetic. and H. F. Bernhisel, poultrymen's Logan has made full prepara- English, spelling representative. tions to fete representatives from President George Stallings of the Utah, Idaho, and Wyoming who SETS VALUE state farm bureau and E. E. Henwill come here Friday for the two-dadricks, president of the Cache convention of the county farm bureau attended the Bottlers of Carbonated Beverages CONTEST LAND s which convenes at the Hotel gathering to speak on farm bureau organization meetings. The session at Lewiston, one at Hyde annual This is the eleventh A verdict against Cache county, Park during the morning, and gathering of the organization. Complete program arrangements plaintiff, vs. Heber W. Green of another at Benson at 8 p m. were have hern made by Secretary C. C Wellsville, and the Federal Land well attended. and Bank of Berkeley, Calif., was reWilcox of the association, Messrs. Stallings and Hendricks John A Larsen, manager of the turned by a jury In First district were in attendance at all meetcourt Ex& afternoon. Furniture Wednesday ings. George S. Dames presided Crystal Bottling The court, under ruling of at the Hyde Park assembly, and change of Logan Addresses by Mayor A G. Lund-strn- Judge M. C. Harris, decreed that William Toombs was in charge of IjOgan and President B Cache county is to pay to the of the Benson meeting. defendants $175 for G Thatcher of the Logan Chamber of Commerce and responses by aere of land taken by the county C. J Coughlan, Idaho Falls, Idaho, in the Wellsville district for road At first Cache county Hnd J W Norton of Ogden, in purposes. behalf of the bottlers' group, Villi had offered the defendants $250, feature the luncheon meet Friday and considered raising the amount Lot hair Rich, local tenor, to $300 last spring, according to noon. EL PASO, Tex.. Mar 3 (I P will contribute vocal selections Alma at last has returned to County Clerk C. V. Mohr. Condemnation proceedings were her master, young Billy Means. Bottlers and supply men will m. fol- instituted finally in the county's Alma, a beautiful rream colored register Ftidav Nt 10 lowed hy luncheon in the hotel effort to gain possession of the mare, answered the call of the land to effect a change in the wild two years ago ballroom at 12 noon David Forsey. president of the Logan - Wellsville road near the e in day after day in search of the crossroads will rail the group organization, to older al 2 p m Friday for the vicinity of Wellsville mare. His quest led him over The jury found that the defenthe following outlined program: ' Business On his last search, the i Economics," dants were entitled to damages of Address, the road saw Means from Dean W L. Wanlsss of the school $100 on account of a distr change, $50 for shade trees up- walked slojrly to him nd nudged (Continued on page two) rooted on the Green property, and bis shoulder. $25 for apple trees taken out in She seemed to he glad to be back. carrying on the road work. Of Club 1 . ti May High BY UNITED PRESS (Copyright, 1932) Httli FROM Open Bring Back Our Baby! Flashes Today This is a lauc ambition, perhaps but one can which few realize for Washwas one ington of the wealthy men of the coland lived onies jHis accordingly. for love intense Mount Vernon moved probably him to spend promore portionately in developing it wealmost than Ur. Taylor thy men of the time spent on their estates. The ornamented and gardened area of Mount Vernon was approximately 20 acres, including lawns, orchard, vegetable garden, tree and shruo plantings, and a flower garden and conservatory. But It would be difficult for a gardener to select a better exemWashington, following plar than him not in the varieties he planted but or how many he planted, rather in how he went about his how he expressed planting and of himself in the development Mount Vernon, his homo. Wide Collection of Tree The flower garden at Mount Vernon certainly was not a typical colonial garden Nevertheless, It typlified many of the tendencies of the gardens of the time. Judg by his trees. ing particularly Washington had a keen appreciation for the best in the native growth. Red cedar, sassafras, dog wood and redbud, pines, sycamores, oaks, hickories and walnuts were parts of the Mount Vernon design as well as cedar of Le banon, coffee bean, European elm. and Persian walnut. Washington knew that a planting largely of succeed would Native species gardeners in other colonies to so learned depend on native plants. Colonial gardening was regional gardening, and there were notable differences between the gardens of Boston, Philadelphia, and Charleston. The colonists brought with them, or soon sent for, plants that seemed like old friends. A charming feature of colonial gardening was the interchange of planting material between friends and acquaintances. TOMORROW: Planning den on paper. Number 53. BY UNITED l. old-tim- i the Cache Valley Daily Herald, the Daily LOGAN. UTAH. THURSDAY. MARCH With which are combined This is the first of a senes of articles on flower gardenfor written ing especially NEA Service and the Grain Range LETTER MAY BE KIDNAPERS CLUE Mar. 3. (UJi A woBOSTON, man described as about 60 years old, who spoke with a German mailed an airmail letter to Col. Charles A. Lindbergh at a postal substation today. On the outside of the letter was penciled: "Spare no expense. Deliver this with all speed possible." Later, from an unofficial source, the following purported excerpt from the letter was obtained: I don't want to tell you how I got this information in my possession. The information is urgent and you should act at once. I Your son urge you to do so. is held by two men and a woman at 16S . . . street. . . The name of the town was poorly spelled, but looked like Irinceton. ao-cen- t, Evcrything Ready For Clinic Saturday Final preparations are being completed for the tuberculosis clinic sponsored by the state board of health, to lie in Cache The elinic. Valley on Saturday whi-- h is free of charge, will be at the Chamber of Commerce rooms from 10 a. m. to 5 p m. with Di. M. M. Critcblow of Salt Lake in charge. Wellsville. The problem of why one should In order to carry out the new program, a fill is necessary be- bother with treatment of the ditween Hyrum city and the high sease Is best answered bv those school. Mr. Israelsen said his who have foucht it or who have lu.-someone through its ravages (Continued on page four) The disease begins in different ways and often continues a long time before actual sickness sets in. Anyone ex cosed to the disease is ur-e- d by the state board Of health to grasp the opportunity by the c! me to save fur(By United Press) ther trouble. Tubt rculosis can be More favorable arrested ii defected In time. NEW YORK conditions abroad were reflected in resistance to pressure in the stock market today. Bonds were strong and active with gralrs ranging to five points. UTAH Snow and colder to The share market made a start up in the morning hut ran into night; much colder south portion; tr. Friday generally profit taking and reacted. gis-c- n t f- - |