OCR Text |
Show ,gr&r . S Meaeauifi ourtxal THE WEATHER UTAH ft) Fair tonight Volume 25. and Number 105. LOGAN, UTAH, THURSDAY, MAY GRAIN RANGE WHEAT May July Sept. .... 1KS1. I?, Open High Low Close 77 .78 .78 4 ?8 .77 77 .764 .76'4 .77 .77 .78 78'4 PRICE FIVE CENTS. Temple Grounds To Be Closed After Sunset H Authors of Washington and More Merry-Go-Rou- WASHINGTON A Presidential summing up of the New Deal program, how far it has gone and vhere it is headed, is scheduled soon, if Roosevelts closest friends have their say. It has been gome time now since the President went on the air in one of his intimate talks to the Nation, and his advisers think that no time is more opportune than the present. Many people have been disconcerted by the Wall Street attack on the Securities Act, the Stock Market Bill' and other reform measures. Congress has become a bit unruly, the Presidents own party particularly so. Some people are wondering whether Roosevelt is abandoning part of his are confused by all the who spokesmen pretend to speak for the President. To have tile aims of the New Deal outlined once again by the one man responsible for them is essential and as a result Roosevelt probably will go on the air before Congress adjourns. pro-gra- STATESMANS VOTE Consider how casually is conducted this grave business of law moking: The Senate was in the midst of a major vote on one of the airmail questions. Senator Copeland, ffew York's phy. voted aye." Then, while the roll still was being called, he ambled over to a seat beside Senator Pat McCarran o." Nevada, also interested in the sician-statesma- a, bill. Senator was just McCarran voting nay." Senator Copeland, with an air of surprise, ventured: "I thought you were in favor of this. No I'm not. I'm , opposed to the whole idea. Well, well, well, quoth Copeland, rising to his feet and adMr. Presi dressing the chair: ding I change my vote from aye to nay. I voted under a misapprehension. KING MAKERS The name of Franklin D. Roosevelt is going to play a big role in this years annual election of American Legion officers. Th organization is supposed to Ik. strictly nonpartisan. But the little band of inner Legion politicians known among the veto as alKing Makers ready are secretly busy lining up support behind a strongly slate. Leaders of the movement are Hanford McNider, and Phil Collins, both Republicans, both bitter foes of the New Deal. McNider, an Iowa banker, is noted for two things. First, he Senate the engineered fight which unseated Smith Wildman Brook-.barwhereupon the latter ran against the veteran Albert W. Cummins, and defeated him. Cummins died shortly thereafter. Second, appointed Hoover as by Minister to Canada, McNider stunned the Canadians ap- by t, (Continued on page two) Suspicion Centers To Person Acquainted With Building Elected Exalted Ruler Fifth Consecutive Time . For the fifth successive year A. manager of the Logan J. C. Penney store, was last night elected exalted luler of the L.ogan Elks club. Three candidates nominated for the position resigned prior to the election. During the four years Mr. Firmage has been directing the affairs of the order the in Logan, lodge has increased m membership more than at any other time during its existence. Other officers elected were H. F. Griftm, esteemed leading knight; T. S. Curtis, esteemed esteemGlenn loyal knight; Storrs, ed lecturing knight; N. W. Kimball, secretary; Leon Fonnesbeck, treasurer; Albert Anderson, e, and Robert Price, tiler. Appointive officers of the lodge will be named by Exalted Ruler Firmage in the near future. Following the election, the members of the club entertained in the interest of the members-o- f the Elks baseball team at a highly entertaining affair. H. F. Laub, manager of the baseball team, introduced each member of the team and explained why the lodge is interested in maintaining a baseball club and create an interest in the game. John P. Smith, Jr., and his Varsity Vagabonds presented inmusic and vaudeville teresting stunts. A comedy ski was given by Miller Ryan and Floyd MorAthleen Budge and her 14 gan. beautiful coeds presented several dances. A buffet luncheon was served after the meeting and A. Firmage, three-year-tru- st Burglars made merry in the Cache county courthouse sometime late Wednesday night or eaily Thursday morning, jimmying a number of locked doors, wrecking the door of the county clerks , Z: S'-, ft. f vault in a futile effoit to open it and finally stealing approximately $25 ii wish from the sheriffs ofBeset by fear for the safety of June Robles, 6, her parents, Mr. fice and Mrs. Fernado Robles, and her grandfather, Bernube Robles, Tile tin ft was discovered by retired cattle baron, wait in this Tucson, Ariz., house for word Mary Liddle, assistant custodian, from her kidnapers. This is the home of her grandfather, where when she came upstairs about 7 a. in after turning on the stolur, the child and her parents also live. her first duty when coming to woik. She saw the door to tier C. V. Mohr's office njur. Walking inside she found tl floor around the vault door cove ed v. ith plastei, and the handi? and combination knocked off the vault door Meanwhile, John Green, m charge of the state tax commission ottice downstairs had also arrived to do some special work at his office and found the door jimmied Itob Sheriff's Office A protect against the rumored .Saturday and Sunday, May 5 and Stowell and Clerk Sheriff closing of the present road cross- 6, the Spring Flower show, spon- C. V. MohrJeff were immediately calling the O S Li railroad tracks be- sor'd by the Mr Mohr investigated his Logan Garden Flower ed tween Hyrum and Wellsville was filed with the county commission ciub, wdl be held in the Public office ami reported that the burglar had been unable to get the Wednesday by Samuel Riggs of library building. Officers of the door open, and that nothing was Wellsville. cdub announce that the Logan and from the office. Sheriff Mr. Riggs said that reports were Cache Stake Relief Societies will missing Stowell, however, on opening his current that as soon as the new found tha a door leading road now under construction and participate in the display. Display office, the courthouse corridor had which eliminated the grade cross- space is being alloted to each slake to opened and that a drawer ing is completed, that the old road in the arrangements made at the tjepn $25 in containing approximately would be abandoned and closed library, under the of well as some checks and as cash supervision to traffic. board members. Members of the money orders had been opened The commission instructed Clerk society have been requested to Only the cash was missing, the C. V. Mohr to write the public bring in a'l varieties of spring money orders and checks being utilities commission, seeking per- flowers and flowering shrubs, also scattered over the floor. to road mission keep the open any potted plants for display. , Mr. Greene said that while the with the placing of gates on both All entries must be brought to door to his office had been sides of the railioad tracks as proLibrary Saturday morning, mied, nothing of value had been tection. May 5, between the hours of 9:00 taken, as near as he could tell Ernest R. Scott, J. W. Scott, and 11:00 a. m. in suitable con- - through a preliminary check, George Larsen and O. A. Nielsen tamers, properly labeled as to the A further investigation by Shcr- formed a committee of four from varicty of the exhibit, with the iff Stowell showed that the Millville which asked the commis- owner's name and address. The burglars had attempted to open sion to have the road south from show will be open to the public at the office of the county recorder Millville to Jossops grove com- 1:30 p. m. Saturday, May 5, and on the second floor, but had been pleted as an FERA project. They remain open until 9:00 p. m. Sat- - unsuccessful. In all instances, a said that the work, including a urday evening. The show will le-- crov, nar had been used in prying mile of grading and graveling, had open on Sunday at 2:00 p. m (the doors open. In gaining access been approved as a CWA project and remain open until p. m to the sheriff's office, part of the but was never completed. A cordial inviEntrance frame was destroyed Sunday The commission explained that tatmn isevening. to to the building was gained simply extended the the FERA permits only hand labor view! this exhibit at the public an open library by reaching through except on special designated projis featuring all va- -' crack between the two rear doors The ects and that team work for the rieties display of spring flowers and flow-- , and pushing up an iron bar. project would have to be donated shrubs, potted plants, etc., Damages Office or else paid for by the county. They ering and ribbons will be ccrefully and Although the only actual theft promised to take the matter under justly awarded for potted plants, was in the sheriff's office, the advisement. artistic bouquets, best three speci- - principal damage was in the counA letter from the Logan Cham- mens, Here, a con- and for best individual ty clerk's office of ber Commerce asking that the blooms. siderable sum will have to be spent the of cost advertiscounty share Announcement has been made to repair the door to the vault ing the Cache valley route through Dr. J. H. Lindford, president eluding the purchase of a new a billboard in Brigham city was of the Logan Garden club that combination' lock and handle. The read and taken under advisement Grant Bowen, state landscape burglar, unsuccessful in his efThe cost of the advertising is $10 from Salt Lake City, will forts to get the door open, had gardener per month tried to dig through be the judge and award the rib- - apparently Approval was made of a request bons at wall around it, leaving big Flow- - the from Charles Carlson of North Lo- er show. the Logan Garden in the plaster t holes gan that three wooden culverts It was necessary to call A. M be placed on the connecting road Larsen, local locksmith, to open between the state highway and ,the vault door so badly had it been North Logan. Clerk to According damaged C. C. Humphreys, Charles C. Mohr, even if the burglar had Anderson and John L. Anderson gained access to the vault, he would of Millville asked the commission have been rewarded with little to have the road between Provicash. All fees had been hanked dence and Millville scarified and the day before, leaving only a rai- graded, saying that it was very nor amount of small coins in the rough. They also asked to have BY UNITED PRESS Vauit. the bridge over the Blacksmith TOOE1.F. May 3 Local mem-The treasurers office, where one Fork river near the Old Milt hers of the International Union would normally look for cash, was repaired. Both requests were tak- of Mines. Mills and Smelter Wora-er.- i untouched Officers believe this en under advisement. voted in favor of a strike, J T to be because this was a front Adams, secretary', announced tod.iv office on the main floor and plainThe vote was 178 to 1 among ly visible The burglar worked employed members and 47 to only in the back offices, out ofMETHODISTS GIVE among unemployed mpmbers. The sight of the police station acrosexecutive committee will fix a date on page eight) ( Continued for the strike. STUDENTS TAKE Commission zoological survey trip to the of west Deep Creek mountains central Utah will be taken by zoology majors, and members of the Utazoa Society of the Utah State Agricultural college, beginning Friday. The survey will last five days and will include approximately 900 miles of traveling. The material which is collected on the trip will be donated to the Zoology department of the College. It is customary for the Utazoa members to make an annual trip to Logan canyon, but this year the society decided to explore a new region and to include zoological collecting along with the outA Zoology majors making the trip include: Dr. J. S. Stanford, Eldon OFFICE HAS Gardner, Wylie Thomas, James Meacham, Clyde Smith, Theodore Thatcher, Ernest Parkinson and LARGE INCREASE Harold Stafford, Logan; Ralph Christensen, Farrell Gunnell, and LaMoine Maughan, Wellsville; OrPostal receipts at the Logan ville S. Lee, Paradise; Richard Idaho; John Rowe, postoffice during April showed a Costley, Ashton, Fork and Ted Galbraith, nearly 20 per cent increase over Spanish ' April, 1933, according to a report Blanding. issued from the office of Postmaster Eugene Yeates this week. Receipts for the month were $4,204.31 as compared with $3,539.03 for the same month last year, a pickup of $665 28. The increase boosted the four months increase to $1,66 94 A total of $16,007.34 has been taken in thus far this year as compared with $14,343.40 for the SAN FRANCISCO, Cal. May first four months of 1933. 3 See where the U. S. chamThe total paid out m money orber of commerce are gathered ders from the local office during in Washington again. Its the the month nearly douoled that of caviar of big business. Last April, 1933. with $28,586 20 as comtime they met I happened to pared with $16,330.36. Monty orbe in Washington and was the ders issued were $9,616 15 as comguest of Jesse Jones, head of pared with $9.583 10 for April of the reconstructioin finance, at last year. their dinner. Now the whole and se. constitution, tret ritual of that Orchid club is to keep the govern. ment out of business. Well, thats all right, for every orhave must a purganization A highly interesting playlet, In pose. But here was the joke: Granumas Garden was presented introduced all the They the big Logan Wednesday evening by financiers, the head of this, Eleventh ward Primary organizathat and the other. As each tion. The ward chapel was filled stood up, Jesse would write to overflowing by parents of the on the back of the menu card, children and others interested in jic t what he had loaned him the presentation. from the R.F.C. (I got that Colorful and attractive cosmenu card yet). tumes added greatly to the interYet they said. Keep governest of the production. Songs of ment out of business various countries were sung More Yours, than 75 children participated m the festival. Mrs. S. E. Clark, president of the organization, and her eoi ps of teachers and officers, were ill charge of the pieseutalion. POST . WILL ROGERS Discusses Road Matters ,s t TWO BANDITS ABANDON CAR Library e jim-th- ' y - 1 CANNON BIG VOTE BY Logan Eighth Ward UNITED PRE39 JACKSON, Miss., May 3 Bishop James Cannon, Jr., for years the stoim center of the Methodist Fpiscopal church south, today won overwhelming endorsement of his church contemporary leaders, when they voted 269 to 170agarnst a plan to retire him. The retirement plan was believed to have been a direct re suit of the wide publicity Bishop Cannon gained through his trial under the corrupt practices act, growing out of his activities against Alfred E. Smith, presiden tial candidate in 1928. The vote to continue Bishop Cannon on the active list, came at the general conference of the church. s, 1 BUTTER PRICES SAN FRANCISCO,' San Framisco score 22 cents. May 3 d butter todav, Removes Chapel Debt 4 I 92 SALT LAKE CITY, M.iv 3 d pi Butter, extra cartoned, 2t ci nls First grade eteani, delivered ii, j Salt Lake, 14 cents, W1 j The twenty-sixt- h anniversary of the organization of the Logan Eighth ward will be celebrated tomorrow by the ward members in a novel and most prietical manner. The indebtedness on the new ward chapel will have been removed by tonight, according to John F Olson, Logan stake cierk The decision to raiv the necessary $300 to clear the indebti dness on the building committee was taken at a meeting of al! the officers of the ward organizations. Before had adjourned the meeting the neiessary funds weie pledged and a promise made to have the money in the hands of the committee not later than tonight. The members of the building imninittee are Fred .1 Kloep-f- i r tli.iirrmin. Bishop Vii tor Ii1er-i.n- , H F Daniils, ' UNITED PRESS f NEW YORK. A last minute on the stock exchange today wiped out early gains and registered the eleventh successive daily decline. Trading had been light ;ices firm. Then a slow Leaders slipped their previous closing i went below. many sell-of- BY UNITED PRESS Mo., May 3 Run to the ground in the rough Ozark hills by state and county officers, two men today abandoned their car and a woman companion and tied on foot. The woman was caught near the car. Captain A C. Sheppard of the state highway patrol said she not Bonny Parker, companSTAND was ion of Clyde Barrow, southwestern desperado. Sheppard also suid he ON STOCK RILL wasCaptain sure the men sought were not Barrow or any of his gang. It was possible, he said, they might be Alvin Kareis and Fred Barker, UNITED PRESS wanted on murder charges and as WASHINGTON, May 3 - The suspects in the Bremer kidnaping. Democratic leadership won the first test vote on the Rayburn stock market control bill today when the house voted down an attempt to lower margin requirements set by the measure. The test vote came on an amendULTIMATUM ment offered by Rep. Edward A. Kenney, D, New Jersey, which would have Increased the loan value of srcurities from 55 per BY UNITED PRESS cent as specified, to 60 per cent, LONDON, May S Great Britain in other woids lowered the margin piesented to Japan today what required to 40 jer cent of the V'as understood to be a virtual commercial ultimatum in an effort muiket value of the security. to halt the damaging encroachKennedy said that industry ment securities markets and the of Japanese trade against Empire. therefore, he believed the margin 'Ifuneo Japanese amrequirements of the bill should be bassador Matsudaira, and S. Matsuyama, comlowered. mercial attache of the embassy, visited Walter Runciman, president of the board of trade. They v ere invited after a ROBLES FRIEND cabinet long meeting at which the trade war was discussed. Runciman was understood to ON SECRET have handed them a memorandum atforth the British setting titude. SY UNITCO PRESS huncimans Instructions were to Ti t SON. Ariz. May 8 intimate diplomatically to Matsufor payment of daira that Britain will declare a ransom and return of June trude war with Japan unless she Koliles, 6, kidnaped heirets, yields to the British demand to were believed to have liven jmrtition world markets on the today. basis of reduced Japanese textile The belief was founded on a exports. pivsterimis trio made hy Al Aguirre and a friend of Bernals Robles, retired cattle baron and grandfather of the MEETING IS HELD kidnaped child. Aguirre dropped out of sight as authorities prepared to reON MERIT BADGES new their search for the child abductors. He disappeared after hoarding a bus at Nogales A group of 64 merit for Tucson. When the bus badge counsellors and other scouters of reached here, he was not the Cache and Logan stakes aboard. This caused report in a meeting Wednesday-nigh- t that he had embarked on a at the stake house. Instrucsecret mission to arrange paytion in merit badge counsellor ment of the ransom. work was the theme of the meet-- ! irg. R. J. Becraft talked on the OFFICERS place of the counsellor in the court of honor program. President Walter M. Everton spoke of the DILLINGER of the counsellor tesponsibility and Alvin Hess, aided by a group o four scouts, gave a practical BY UNITED CRESS demonstration. CHICAGO. May 3 A mammoth E Allen Bate-maSuperintendent 'shoot to kill army patrolled Chiwho was in charge of the cago streets and raided gang meeting, gave a discussion of the haunts today, feverishly following procedure in merit badge counsela new ; clue to the whereabouts ling as follows up 1 Scout shall receive proper of John Dillinger. Leaders frankly hoped that their merit badge application form from bullets already had brought the ; coutmaster, giving scout's name, merit badge desired, name of desperado to his end. Belief that Dillinger is holed up counsellor and scoutmaster's signature. m Chu ago musing a severe body 2 -- Scout shall make an appolnt-n- a wound like an animal driven to nt with the counsellor. his den grew throughout the day 3 Scout shall have read the Examination of a car found yesmerit badge pamphlet, which gives terday on the North Side, the one minimum for the stolen April 23. from Dr Roy F requirements Francis of St. Paul by three men badge 4 - If more than one identified by him and his wife as meeting is icquested by the counsellor, the mi mhers of the Dillinger gang, counsellor shaS retain the applidisclosed 'enough blood on the cation until the scout completes and discarded bandages thi merit badge requirements. If to kill an ordinary man,' accordscout fails to meet the appointing to a police physician ments within a reasonable time, Federal investigators were use return the application to that Dillinger himself was pit the scoutmaster unsigned. the wounded man CABOOL, WOCRATS j 'says: Ward Primary Gives Interesting: Playlet Flower Show Be Held 1 ZOOLOGICAL TRIP grounds, no admittance to the ground will be permitted after dark during the month of to President May, according Joseph II. Shepherd. Dunng the past few nights while the temple has been flood lighted, many people have trampled over the flower beds and almost mined some of the beau-t- il ul landscaping of the ground. lor tin reason no one will lie permitted on the ground after dark in the future. In i it fact, pointed out, it Hhould -- ' ing. 4 not be necessary for any one to enter the grounds in order to view the temple with its A far better flood lighting. view of the temple can be obtained away from the grounds than underneath its walls. The public is courteously requested to adhere to these rules and assist the temple presidency in maintaining the temple grounds in their usual beauty so that those who come here from afar for the Golden Jubilee nmy also enjoy the beauty of the temple block. To protect the flowerbed iinu lawns of the Logan temple By DREW PEARSON and ROBERT S. ALLEN John E Olson, Leon Fonnes-beek- , Austin Fond, Leon Seeley and Harold O Fowcll Work on the new rhapel was started about three years ago 0 Since that time more than has been collet ted and expended for its (onstrurtion In this amount is included the final $300 now being eolleeted In January 143: the ward had an indebtedness of about $20tm Great credit fur the lifting of indebtedness and getting the building completed is given by mi mhers of the committee to Chairman Kloepfer This is the second chapel the ward has constructed during its 26 years. Renovation of the grounds and parts of the budding will he undertaken shortly preparatory to the setting of the date of the for the dedication chapel. $13.-00- PAT , ENGLAND SENDS JAPAN TRIP 15,-(h- HOPE SHOT s d BUILDING STILL Set Funeral Of Smithfield Baby SMH H FIELD Funeral services for Luana May Chambers, daughter of Mr and Mrs Noble L Chambers of Srrth-firlwill be held in the Smithfield Second ward Saturday at 2 p m Interment will be in the Smith-fiel- d cenutery un ler the direction of the Lindquist mortuary The baby died at home Wednesday morning following a dim of whooping ou; h SHOWS INCREASE Building permits issued from the of Inspector C. T. Barrett totalled $8100 as compared with $2,500 during April of last year. According to Mr. Barrett, the permits were all for new construction ork The total for the first four months nf 1I'U is ns COiri- jiated with $x.5uo. offue TO ATTRACT Legion District Convention To Convene Tomorrow Smithfield is all ready to entertain at her annual Health Day festival tomorrow. Thousands of people from every community of the county are expected to be In attendance. Many will come to see the Health Day parade, said to be the best that has ever before been seen in this section. All the schools of Cache county are participating In the parade with beautiful floats. Floats will also be entered in the parade by the various local of the American Legion district No. 1, embracing Cache and Rich counties. The district convention of the American Legion will be held in connection with the Health Day festival. Dr. R. R. Lyman of the council of Twelve, who was to be the speaker at the Health Day meeting in the Smithfield tabernacle ut 11 oclock, will not be present at the services. Dr. Lyman has recently left to, visit some of the mission fields of the L.D.S. church in the United States. Dr. Lymans place at the celebration will be taken by Dr. E. A. Jacobsen of the faculty of the Box-eld- USAC. In the afternoon horse pulling contests in which will be seen in action some of the best horses in the northern part of Utah and southern Idaho will be conducted in the southeast corner of Smith-fielThis entertainment Is the direction of the SmlthfielcT post of the American Legion. , Former Governor Charles R. Mabey, national of the American Legion, who was to be one of the main speakers at the public meeting of the district convention, has been called to a special meeting of the 'national department of the Legion at Indianapolis and will not be present at the meeting. Among the speakers, however, will be Commander Lester A. Blackncr, head of tte department of Utah. d. un-d- er COURTS OF HONOR PLANNED SUNDAY of horior are Three courts scheduled in the Cache Valley Scouts Council of Boy Sunday, according to announcement today Pond. All of Executive Preston three are for both scouts and vanguards. A Logan district court will be held in the Logan Second ward with Chairman S. V. Prows and E. Alien Bateman In charge. An Oneida district court of honor will be held in the River-dal- e ward chapel with Chairman Alien R. and Cutler Harley C'eaves in charge. The Franklin district court of honor will be held in the Preston F:rst ward with Chairman Law- rcnce Schroeder and Geoige L. Ptanger in charge. Ninth Ward Primary Festival Tonight The spring festival of the Logan Ninth ward Primary association will be held at 7:30 oclock tonight at the ward recreation hall. Elaborate preparations have been made on the costumes and only Primary children will participate. There is no admission charge and the public is invited to attend. P.T.A. Names Mehr On Tax Committee Otto Mehr, former president of the Ijcgan council, has been named to represent that organization on the joint tax committee of Cache county, it was announced today. Mr Mehr will meet with representatives of other organizations tonight in mapping out a program for presentation to the larger committee next Thursday. Parent-Teach- Happy-- f Pirthdaii! Edward Edwards, 253 West First North street, is 74 years of age today. Henry Gessell, manager of the meat department of the American Food Stores, and Rae Zollinger of the Budge hospital are also observing their birthday today. ongriitnlations! |