OCR Text |
Show La fW .SAJ A LOGAN. UTAH, Number 167. Jl'LV MONDAY, a&vw- Grain Range tie Herald. UTAH Local showers anJ thunder storm this ufternoon and tonight; Tuesday generally fair north, unsettled south portion Volume 24. j& u The Weather ' 43S n.B f wheat July Sept. Dec -- May 17, 1 SI I! Onen High Low 1H1 117 1 15 H 120 1 IS 118 128 12- 7- 122 123 ...lie .115. Close Lie 118 121 1.2S PRICE FIVE CENTS :i. m VI Jy o Today By . Wins Post Outlines Plans ! Arthur Brisbane (Copyright, 1983) Praise Roosevelt. Mr. Hitler Copy Cats. 12 fv Death President Roosevelt will be Near Russia, July 17 UJP' Wiley Post, continuing his swift flight around the world on his attempt to break the recoid he and Harold Catty set in 1931 took oft at 5 15 today for Novo S.bursk, Siberia. scheduled His next stopping place, almost midway across Siberia, is approximately 1580 here The daring Oklahoman, who took New York Saturday, off from Chancellor borrowing Hitler, at Berlin a id stopfrom President Roosevelt, or per- baitedm briefly Moscow only three hour ped haps be thought of it himself, puts while adjustments were all German business under govern- made tominor his plane. Business and ment supervision. When he left here, Post was 13 labor will be under police con- hours and 9 minutes ahead of the and trol, with strikes, lockouts, record labor other disputes 'suppressed. Later there is to come a definite arrangement of all these things SOLDIN, Germany, July 17 il I) The attempt of two Lithuanian Here, various codes governing airmen to fly from New York to exKogno, capitol of their country, Industry and businesses are pected to end much wastefulness ended in death in the woods near here today. of strikes and lockouts. The flyers, Steven Darious and The coal industry, at present is code concerning wages, Stanley Girenas, after crossing thi preparing a lost themhours aod number of days work in Atlantic successfully, a week. It would be a blessing selves in the darkness over Gerto the country and the coal indus- many and cracked up, apparently be out of gasoline. try If a fair arrangement can Report from various sections inmade to keep peace in an Industhey had wandered blindly try wTch has been more or less dicated for hours, seeking a safe landing permanently at war place Soldin district officials said both s By the way, Imagine the killed of Chancellor Hitler when he fliers apparently had been budies their although reads in a Vienna paper a story instantly, were not mutiliated They came covering three pages, showing that at a point about 05 miles he is descended from a Czech Jew- down northeast of Berlin, having flown ish lady, also named Hitler. a greater distance than Wiley Past, who landed at Berlin on his fligh The story is given in great de- around the world tail. Alexander Baseh of Polna, The bodies were identified by found in his book the names of Darious In addition, passports ten Jewish Hitlers born in prague. carried a pilots license. between 1800 and 1831. One member of the family still has his gravestone standing with Hebrew Inscriptions on it, in the Polna Jewish cemetery, and showed that Clara Hitler, one of a family that moved to Vienna and were baptized Christians, was a sister of Chancellor Hitler's grandmother, MOSCOW, mile-fro- Post-Gatt- That relationship probably will y annoy Jews more than It will Hitler, but It will annoy HitThat ler considerably strange-face- d gentleman is the illu under live to supposed d sion that be is a 100 per cent Nordic. dark-haire- d, Logan Stake Old Folks to Meet Tuesday fair-haire- The United Aircraft company deserves great credit for developing American aviation. Flying time to California will be out to seventeen hours, doing away with wait-- , for engine overAnd many hauling at landings. Americans do not know It United aircraft airplanes now make twelve trips each way daily between Chicago and New York in five hours It is a comfortable trip, usually with only one stop That efficient flying corporation, due to the initiative of Charles E Mitcheii, his associates in the national city bank and the Boeing deserves Air company, public 3 thanks. Friday, July 14, France celebrated of that picturesque the birth of modern Bastille Day, tbs destruction old prison, and French liberty. (Continued on page two) WILL pOGERS 'Says. SANTA MONICA. Cal. July It's a good thing those Italians landed in seaplanes. If they had landed on the ground they wouldn't have had room to land tor Italians. Well they have great cause to rejoice. You know where the idea come from, don't you? Teddy Roosevelt, when he sent the fleet around the world. There was a lot of Mussolini In that old boy. I will bet you that this Wiley Post makes it around the world and breaks his own record. I would have liked to have been in there with Post instead of the robot. And I could have if I bad known as much as It does. Well the unemployed will be coming in pretty soon from the London conference Yours, 17 JU MiMekS faraiteaa. W Gen. Hugh S. Johnson at his desk. y erao-t.on- - Ilfi Goal re- membered for many things, heaven only knows how many, at the rate he is traveling in unexplored fields, but praised by no one more gratefully than by fifteen thousand American postmasters whose jobs and future he attempts to make secure, putting them under civil service rules, no longer to be the playthings of politics. This is all the more praiseworthy since these are. generally, Repostmasters publican appointees. " W ;,0- Fast Round Trips. The Bin Fiench Day. . Murray Educator Is Superintendent of Logan System Logan L D S stake old folks will assemble Tuesday at 1 p m at Nibley hall for their annual reunion under direction old folks committee Those Invited to attend this function are all members of the ward over the age of 60, returned mis sionaries, and widows of all wards in the stake Arrangements for the program aud other activities are under direction of the stake old folks committee of which S B Mittnn is chairman. Promptly at 1 p m in Nibley hall the program will begin after which a luncheon will be served on the lawn east of Nibley hall on the Senior high school campus Other members of the stake committee are William Watson, Sylvan Needham and Lawrence Bailey. summer of the stake R.O.T.C. OFFICERS BACK FROM CAMP Lt. Col. Carr W. Waller of the Utah State Agricultural college returned on Saturday with seventeen boys of the college R O T C unit, from Fort Barry, California. The camp has been m session for the past four weeks and was composed of coast artillery students of Utah, Washington and California Lt. Col. Waller stated that the camp has been unusually successful and that the conduct of the students has been the most creditable of any he has yet been to. He also said that the rifle target shooting excelled that of any group he has seen. Advanced military students are eligible to at'end the camp, which is a requirement for the degree of second lieutenant conferred upon them at graduation. MORE BEET MONEY PRESTO N Manager Thomas Heath of she Franklin County Sugar company announces the sugai company has paid an additional bonus of twenty cents per ton on iast years sugar beets This will amount to about $20.0(10, and will be followed by the last of a senes of payments in October. U. S. Administrator Tells How People Can Help In Work EDITORS NOTE: The National Industrial Recovery Art, now commonly called the NIRA, from its initials, is perhaps the most measure ever passed b) Congress in peace time. Enacted by the last Congress as part of President Roosevelt's new deal program, it literally puts the government In partnership with business. It aims at putting men buck to work, increasing (heir pay, and shortening their hours by eliminating competition within each industry by mutual agreement of producers (with government sanction) on hours, minimum puv and trade practices. It also gives the government a measure of control over produttion, and insures the right of labor to organize and negotiate collectively. Codes of industries are now lieing submitted for government approval, and the whole complicated machinery set under way by Gen. Hugh IS. Johnson, an army officer with a splendid record of service, notably In administering the General Johnson here tells YOU what TOC r.m draft in do to help put over the measure and bring about the recover) ull desire. - 17-- The j SALT I. KK July 1? The Utah legiblutit'e toiia pissed the stale industrial recovery ait whi. h had been iitnwn up by a special committee over the week end The measure, labeled as Senate Bill 11 and a substitute for Senate Bill 9 passed without a dissenting vote, three voting absent It provides for construction of useful and essential public works and for the cooperation of the state of Utah with the national government in the public wotka program under the national recovery act Under its provisions, all men benefiting from funds expended under the act, must be bonafide Utah residents, but do not necessarily need to be residents of the county tn which the work is done men with dependents first oonsidei ition After passing the recovery hill members awaited a special message from Governor Henry II Blood which was expected momenindicated The that governor tarily his message would deal with eight or ten subjects but would not include the resubnussipn question Senate bills four and five providing for amendments to the state gambling laws were advinced to third reading under suspension of the rules Discussion of the re 'overy act occupied the house during the will be given session RESIDENT DIES Curtis, 79, retur-- i 10 family dupi at home, fC2 South First vest, Sun illness a irom after prolonged day he ut trouble Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 2 p m in the Lo Man LDS Sixth ward chapel un-- j iler direction of Bishop Olof 1 Pedersen Buna) will be in Logan a. Bon j it V cermhrv Lindquist (Mortuary has charge of the body George William d firmer fine hole," I was warned, "Iheie never was in history a diaft enfunod without bayonets Well, we made history without I'uMh opinion did it lhe family requests that flowers bayouH i policing every community with be omitted Mr Curtis was born in Payson, knowledge gained from studmg the law and seeing that it was 'January 3u 1864, a son of Ceoige ind Kmma Whaley Curtis He carried out, fairly, at home had made his home in Logan durThis is a vastly bigger thing this new democratic industrial ing the last 33 years Surviving are his widow, Mrs and it will tike son, Dr a more deeply informed pubin Millie Haws Curtis, one O Curtis, and one daughGeorge ti to nl a make go opinion Mrs D K Allen, both of It is terrifically compluated, and ister, lit Lake City, seven grandchilmoreover it will hangc, a euh dren, one brother, Ray Curtis, It industry codifies us pie is I Mrs and eight slaters, not enough that ea h ludwMiv and h rovu, Mrs Ksphinas TanSimons, mini vt eat h man should wahh hi p Mrs Lexis Hams, all of Proleat Die government should get ner, Mrs Hattie Greer, Chicigu, vo, n m foi it but is time him," Mrs (Tara Harding, Pavson, Mrs each commumt) to tontriMiie Alice Colvin, Mrs Let tie Baker soim Ihmr silt Lake, and Mrs Kmma Mi something positive, hardet than shelling out i qiuir Clellun, Dus, hesne and uilling it a d iy IT MEANS thinking, in tv be with a pad and pencil, thinking out how re to translate the purpHM . nf t into t rro , oovery administration of things to he done oi left mud from, in your own bUMne jib oi town BY UNITED DRESS Maybe it is true th it the b t on in the oldest thinking ccrtunly m Oh duatriul NEW YORK - Highly favorable pist has come fiom the labor side e business news, including wage in Maybe the most i omprt henviv ireases, nnprmcd corporation re-- I planning now is tomtiq; Itom in orts and a sharp use in commodrfubtrialibls ities sent tile stoi k market into It makes no different utd t new high ground sinie 1931 today i certainly the whole thing i million with volume over six both of to th challenge thinking hares A burst of strength in the sides and all of us Very soon the lleohol division Matured through lessons of hard ,rattue of tin out the day on the curb and stock Recovery Act will be all import- - t xi h aiige as the time approai hed for four states to vote on repeal (Continued on p ige two in h t nt Sky Stages Show As Extra Yellowstone Park Feature ft .. i AGED LOGAN 1917-1- Tou've put yourself l inornirf rut-thro- at BY GEN. Ill GH JOHNSON rtlen for NEA Service and the Journal WASHINGTON, D C, July national recovery administration is to opei.ite publicly, ps far as that is humanly practuable That means sum tiling to tha man m the street of cities far from It means a duty, Washington a pait in this administration, that is up to him, and that seems to me worth explaining Hire we are holding healings on the first of the codes to be submitted, which are to become a body of mduilnul bw for the different industries it's all being done in a gold fish bowl Not because we ale fond of being paed at, but so that the ai lion and method of i ode making and administration can be seen from far off We want it seen so plainly that an und everybody everywheie and b stud) mg ian pick out his home town part in recov-ei- y There s no time to write each i letter about it But neith) erson er is it a time to jump in, head first Use your head, first we ask every citizen; study sharply the bread aims and objei fives of this recoveiy law, then the rode;, and lulmgs as tlie develop in regard to your own bos. ness, and then vou will be (inking out exactly the wheel to put )our shoulder to, for the national posh Study first wh.it I i ill the bibb, issued as Bulletin No 1 und Bulletin No 2 by the adniinc tuition PASTE the table in our hat Keep the bulletins on your desk Theyre no bail) hoc. they are the beginnings of luw and practice in a new business regime They mark a turn in the tide of American industry that may prove as vital as was the onset of the industrial levulutiou abiuai a hundred years ago or the start of the companies of Merchant Venturers m the 17th century We cannot be sure of success, except through national cooperation Certainly I see no doing it by czarism Industrial is the underlying idea of the president and of the Recovery Act. Wc are the counrot tryng to goose-ste- p try. There are teeth in the act, if certain situations arise, its provisions are mandatory and I shall r.ot hesitate to execute the law as written But the firLt line cf reliance for enforcement la on public opinion For me that reliance is based on recollection of a concrete pt rsonal I had the task, after experience law, drafting the seleotie senes of administer ng it m 1917-1- Of Special (' minittee Is Adopted i 1 - School Hoard Selects Prominent School Man, State Athletic Leader, As 4i Superintendent K. Kiluani Allan Hateman, 38, who for the last five years lias siTvetl as supei intendent of Murray city schools, was Manual Saturday afternoon to succeed the late Louis A. Petersen as superintendent of the Logan city schools. Action of the Logan City Board of Education in naming Mi'. Bateman came as a result of several weeks deliberation on the records of 41 applicants seeking the post left vacant when Superintendent Betersen died late in May. Mr. Bateman will assume his new duties on August 1, haing hem given additional time to arrange his affairs in ALLEN BV1LMAV the oil ice of superintendent at Murray. he lioaid considers Mr.- Bateman's record one of out-- i, standing merit, Clerk David Tarbet of the city school O Jake Factor - I board said Monday morning in announcing selection of Mr. Bate- man. FIVE Mr. Bateman was graduated from Jordan high school, the University and University of Chicago, SCHEDULED SOON ofandUtah comes to head the Logan city school system after sixteen years active service either as teacher, of The two weeks from now until principal or superintendent EDITOR'S NOTE: I he I nited a week from next Saturday will be schools. In August, 1929, Mr. Bate-mwas awarded a degree of lrev herewith presell I s the gra- busy ones at the Boy Scout camp of eoi in Logun canyon with five district master of arts in education from phic star) of 12 d.v and torture undergone ill Chicago university after spending out encampments scheduled. (lie hands of khlnajHT!! b) John the summers of 1926, 27, 28 and on to First docket, accoruing h actor. 29 in residence there for (Julie the Barber) graduate Scout Executive Preston W. Pond, He received his bachelor Is. the Oneida district encampment study. BV JOHN EAtTOK of arts degree from Utah universlur ling tonight. Logan district (J.iko the li.triM i ) scouts will enter the camp Tues- sity in 1917, and was graduated from Jordan high school in 1913. CHICAGO d kidnaping day morning to remain until Sat- He is a member of the Chicago is This direcunder camp was an endless nightmare of tor urday university chapter of Phi Delta lure and hoiror m whi. h I ex tion of Denton Rogers, district Kappa, educational fraternity for chairman committee and anw minute camping pecUd ;mghUj)o iny graduate students. I'xecutive Preston W. Pond, last Has (Served In All Grades ' . , From the time this gang seized A feature of Logan districts his graduation from Following me just nfU r we left the road camp will be an outdoor court of Mr. Bateman university, house until I was freed last night honor Friday night as part of the Utah one year as principal of I was .subjit ted to a (onstant round stakes fathers and sons outing spent Kauab seminary, and as teacher of thi eats of deith and inutile program in Kanab high school on lion thought I would never gel Oneida scouts and scouters will year. Afterjunior teaching in the schools out alive at camp until Thursday. remain of four Murray years, Mr. BateThe men put machine guns at Wednesday the. Hyrum district man was appointed principal of the breast and back and said troops my will be led to re into camp high school there and was active they would blow me to bits if 1 main until Saturday. in that capacity for four years, did not tel) them how nun h money wilt be Nevt week set up then appointed superintendent of ramps 1 lie food they gave me on hud for Benson basis and troop the city schools wdNii t fit for dogs , Fur 12 days Uuihe did nuts Benson scouts Murray city has the reputation they diil not take Lite bandage off will enter on July 24 oi one of the best regulated having eyes It wai like being blind I Cm he scouts set up ramp on school lost all tra k of time It aterned systems in the state, Mr. as though I had been In their Wednesday, July 2t, remaining Tarbet said. until Saturday, July 29, according in addition to his educational hands lor weeks to District Chairman Alvin Hess. Covered F.ye activities in a professional capahe Cai Th will enter boys camp city, Mr. Bateman has been arbiThe kidnaptrs thiurt me into their automobile and whipped a early Wednesday morning of next trator for seven years in the Utah week details will be Propram baud ige over my eyes We drove school athletic association. He later The program com- high for about hilf au hour the mght is at present a high councilman C H Sorensen, in Cottonwood stake I was seized Then they dumped mittee comprises of the LDS. me out in a room I think U was district camping committee chairchurch, and chairman of the campFred Duce, man; Commissioner be a Use a lon.rete basement of committee the Salt Lake ing could feel the told lemeiit ot th Executive Pond, Mr Hess, Dr. A. council, Boy Scouts of America. L Wilson, troop committee chairfloor with my hand I couldn't see The Logan school board, accordman of Logan Fifth ward, and a thing to Mr. Tarbet, went thoroughThe next day they drove me to Si outimister N. J Crookston of ing ly into the records, qualifications, It was about an North Logan troop another plat e and of every one of hour and a hilts drive away 1 Friday of next week the Cache the 44experience candidates for the superinthink this was a farm house I stake's annual fathers and sons tendents post. Not only were aprow Th it outing will be held in connection could heir roo .ter plications received but the board woi ttie wav I ou!d tell when ft with the Boy Scout camp Alma members went out seeking applinew day lagan loan! tows Sonne, stake V M M I A superininterviewed candidates, lh place tendent, is chairman of the com- cations, references lowing in the di t toce from various must have been mar a jMtiioad mittee on arrangements for the sought and studied groups, qualifications line bftfilJV i he li d the win dies fathers and sons outing The boys of hnoiootives arid th' and their dads will break camp of candidates as to social contacts, personality, experience and hum of A feature of highspeed inter urban sometime Saturday A number of the applitrains this outing will be die campfire training cants after interviews with memMeals hair program on Friday night bers of the school board Baid, acI he Ai first l he gi ii.t n.v me iB stuiit truupN uf Cat-tidisto Mr Tarbet, that they (Continued on p tye twu trict will disband at noon Satur- cording never contacted a school board will be on a hid day Leadership wlio went more thoroughly into Ka( h troop bud h tioop basis th- of applicants IN YOUNG ill than qualifications furnishing its own leaders did the board in Logan city hIso supply its own menu The menu will be worked out in dttal seeking a successor to SuperinPetersen UTAH CLUB WORK liter and copies mailed to each tendent ' During the last five years in It is expected, according tioop to Mr Hess, th it the Cache dis-- l nix school work, Mr. Tarbet said. Mr Bateman has stressed eleThere are now 4i farm ai ti bonne Uu t (amp will not cost the scouts school supervision, and sc unte t lub in II t oui't ics of t ih inme thin fifty cents em h for the mentary hm record in this respect ranks ehtne four davs limb r the sum t v isiofi of D well up with other school adminMurri imi Mis Myrtle PivoKon istrators over the state. fciii nt ite 4 if lub Ml sT LAIK( APE aJt r of ili School Work Well Started ixttnsion vuri e 14(0! lui)' to Mr Mr MidLAKE, July 17 H Pi In- vale. Bateman was born inson Murray of stitutions have been received by E A inandOctober. 1895, a The I'Torim of tin id w ph i Alice Glover Bateman. the Mate road department that a d i of dub work in thi He married and has six children. is signed for oung mi l an I womtn ert.un part of highway expendi-tuie- s hen Mr. Bateman assumes Ins Id obuit-o- f must go toward landscaping over 1G ytftrs of ip duties the office by Augin tnd s. iemt iml horn the farm appropriate be unifying ol ust 1. he willLogan find virtually all of elub. Mr cMurriv points out are m mi thm ofares the plans for the next school year to offer oppuiUitnU tor in so tar as budget adoption and merit and xpresMon of the im m of finn bt I s in varioDa pha teaching personnel are concerned m! Mxitl hte, home (umiinuiifs alteady adupted Superintendent Petersen had completed these tasks to assist them tn pm mug lot vocations and to lssnme rt spoiiM prior to his death. There will be but one month rebihlit whi h fe will plate upon r shouldt their maining for preparation for the 1933-3of firm and school year in Logan city Maiuigeri il phiwhen Mr. Bateman begins his achome life lie trnpliisitd is well as the need for the development tivities here on August L well round d personality, a of Belated birthf .self-a- s til prae-tt HAS S1ST BIRTHDAY dignity day posies today ot life al phdosophv rui it LYNN, Mass, tLPi The first go to Henry A Members (house propi ts in which Theurer genial Church of Christ, oldest Congrethe) are espeiiilv intt r Med and Logan stake high gational church in America, rethe discussions Ht lab duelings councilman, man- cently observed its Solst anniverare r nm ermiig problem lh t perager of Theurers sary here. tain (lireitlv to ti.e intMtibeis .stores and a forare officials Kxtension bending mer Cache coun- their efforts to re ii h the young uy commissioner farm men ami women of the state - Mr Theurer toss1 1 with helpful information pertain e ed another ing to the farm and home, and it into the the farm is hoped that through river Sunday. SAN FRANCISCO, and home sitenc? (dubs the proper July IT, contacts will be made, Mr Murray San Francisco butter &id score 25. Tells Story CAMPS ARE of Kidnaping fme-me- nt lh-- 1 1 atop Mount Washburn has provided additional excitement to visitors who delight in making stellar obsei vations at closer range Moonlight pic mis, moonlight excursions by buses and drives along Yellowstone lake hy light of the moon have attrac ted hundreds each night during the of the month early and middle dudes A group of rangers and wranglers,1 savages numbering more than 250 gathered at Artist Point on the rim of the Grand canyon recently for a moonlight picnic aided by music, entertainment ptugrams sad tail" stories. II 111 1 v PEOPLE f 1 I I SLr i V I hlip Happy. - YELLOW STONE PAR K, Wyo, July 17 - Constellations, lunar xinbows and the b.g full moon hae combined to give Yellowstone paik visitors a series of thrills during middle July One group decided to visit the top of Mount Washburn late at night under the full moon, and they were rewarded for tlirif long aoto climb by sighting a (jeifect lunar rainbow Numerous similar phenomena have been observed m m the spray of the lower' and upper falls of the Yellowstone river by scores of persons A large telescope II un 4 siir-ti- x- mile-ston- nt DUPTrmn rxpToirruuna hk r |