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Show Tffftr 'ft TgrnVirrBityri uustfa; i f THE PAGE EIGHT. HERALD-JOURNA- Army Planes Speed From Capital to GOVERNMENT AIDS LOGAN, UTAH,. MONDAY L, Protect Alaska IN SOUTHWEST ( Py Cnitrd Pres .) WASHINGTON, July 23-government fought with every instrument at its command today and loss to lighten suffering in the western farm country where heat and drouth are taking a terThere was nothing rific toll. Washington could do about the weather but even that problem was being attacked with an eye to The AAA future devastations. continued designating counties as Purareas. relief emergency chases of cuttle mounted over 000 more than 1.000.bringing '?? " - - r- - saw-- jZ.g&rm (100.00. A KOI IT DILLINGER (Continued From Page One) and fell death He died there in the muck of his own blood and the dirt of dark ulley. His two abandoned women eoinpunlons him at first sign of danger and Ironicully the picture escaped. Llillinger hud seen was un almost parallel of his own career. He another criminal had watched walk to an electric chair. Had aeen prison lights dim as the convict met hia death. Had thought perhaps of fate awaiting nim If he ever was captured. In Washington it was announced that federal agents would continue their eeaich for members of the Diliihger gang. It was estimated the federal government hunt had cost upward of 100,000. To determine the ability of the TJ. 8. Air Corpa to protect Alaska at well as to show its mobility, 10 giant Army bombing planes took off from Washington, D. C.( on a massed reconnaisance flight to Fairbanks, a distance of 3,667 miles. Here yon see the planes as they appeared In a warming-up- ' flight over the Capitol. ld Jailed forNote in Connor Case Cornish News Bara-broug- I the penitentiary. WANT ADS Too Late To Classify FOB KENT FURNISHED APARTMENT--24- B So. 1st t East. J26. Chu-lot- anniversary. Lunch was served received here of the death and a social evening enjoyed. Henry J. Silverthorn, 75, of Mrs. J. W. Seamons and family spent last week visiting relatives in Hyde Park. Mr. Seamons is and attending summer school at the visiting her grandmothers other relatives. Mrs. Ephraim Bergeson spent a part of last week In Salt Lake. She and Mr. Bergeson returned home last Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Eppich and family joined a party of relatives from Trenton and the party motored to Bear Lake where they spent last Sunday, They reported a delightful time. Mrs. Mary Bingham and granddaughter, Thelma Bingham and Mr. and Mrs. Loyal Bingham, all of California, are visiting relatives In Cachff valley. They are at the homes of Ray and Gilbert Bingham this week. Mrs. Moses, mother of Mrs. Mary Durnat has returned after spending the past two months with relatives in Salt Lake. Mrs. Moses was formally from Smith-fiel- d and one of the early setlers of that place. Cornish Winner the party. The game played here last SatLawn Forty Held afternoon between Newton A big monthly social was held urday and Cornish resulted in a victory Thursday afternoon in the form for the home team. The score of a lawn party at the home of was Mrs. Erwin Kendell. , Mr. and Mrs. 3. W. Pitcher atThe Primary ' sponsored the af- tended a funeral in Ogden last fair. Social games and a pro- week. gram were features and refreshMr. and Mrs. Frank Petersen ments were served to a large and Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Andergroup of officers, teachers and sen spent Saturday evening with members. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Miles. The Mrs. Anna Jensen is home again was Mrs. Miles' birthday after spending ten days nursing occasion Mrs. Ezra Kendell and her new son. Stark Visits ' Mr. and Mrs. Vergil Thomas announce the arrival of a son Monday, July 14 at their home. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Durant announces a daughter born Sunday July 14. Mrs. Durant is at the Budge hospital in Logan.' Both mothers and babies are reported to be progressing satisfactorily. Mrs. John O. Erickson arrived home from a Logan hospital where she has been since July 1th convalescing from an appendicitis Reports on her recovoperation. ery are favorable at this writing. 'Mrs. G. A. Anderson entertained at a luncheon Thursday evening in compliment to her aunt, uncle pnd cousin, Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Atkin of St. George, and Mrs. Levanger of Glendale, Utah, who are visiting relatives in Cache valley after attending the Nelson reunion held at Millions park in Bountiful Little Wunda Kendell has gone to Ogden to spend her vacation, ; Charged with trying to extort ISO from Charles Connor, father of the missing Hartsdale Manor, N. iY, baby, on the promise he could furnish "valuable Information, Bernard Seidenberg (above). 20-- y ear-- o Id unemployed theater usher, was sentenced to three months Man Dies At Dance In Ogden Saturday LOGAN, July 23 Word has been Honoring Miss Verl Baker of the Dee hospital training class of Ogden,- who has spent the past two weeks here on her vacation, Miss Audry Bergeson entertained with an attractively arranged bridge party last Friday evening. BIKD WHISTLES SONG The guests included 12 girl friends ,'.!!) NASHVILLE, Tenn. Andy of Miss Baker's. a canary, owned1 by They were seated at small taMr. and Mrs. J. J. Bronschien, bles where luncheon was served. "Yankee Score prizes were awarded to Verl whistles the verse of Doodle as perfectly as & musician. Baker, Lucille Bingham and Mae The bird hag not mastered the Hanson. The Sunday school will enterrefrain, however, and hesitates alter finishing the verse before break- tain all members of the ward in an outing Sunday morning. ornotes and trills of ing off into This has been suggested by the dinary canaries. general board for every school. Sunday school will convene as usual. Lunch will be served at noon, and social visiting will follow. h The party will leave the store at 8 o'clock Sunday morning. is invited to join Everyone In A marriage license was Issued Saturday to William H. Carter, Preston, and Rose C. Bell, Logan. New Taxi In Ault at 448. U.S.A.C, and Mrs. Frank Petersen and son. Gene are spending the week in Malud visiting Mrs. Petersons sister and family, Mr. and Mrs. William Hadfield. Mr. JUDGE RULED ON CONES Double HOUSTON. Tex. (l.Ht dip ice cream cones will remain double dips so far as Judge Hoy is concerned. He reCampbell cently overruled a plea for a temporary injunction against W. N. Blanton, et al, chairman of the milk industries board, to compel that boapa to limit the amount of ice cream sold by dispensers of double dip cones. The injunction was asked by a number of druggists who claimed such sales were in violation of the code of fair practices under NRA. AIRPORT GRAZING GROUND LEXINGTON, Neb. (U.Ri "New York 1360 miles; San Francisco 1360 miles. Thus reads a Signboard near this city, which is a halfway point on United Air Lines' route. air transports fly over the battlefield where the Cheyenne Indians made their last historic stand against the whites. The air port was one famous as a buffalo grazing ground. coast-to-coa- - st te of 3029 Jefferson avenue, Ogden, Utah, who dropped dead in a dance hall at 3120 Washington avenue shortly before midnight Saturday, after dancing a short time. Mr. Silverthorn was a brother-in-laof the late William Swinyard of Logan. He was born in Dillingham, Dorchester, England, in November, 1858, a son of John and Martha Silverthorn, and came to Utah when he was 25 years old. For many years he was employed as a window decorator in Ogden department stores. He was a member of SL Josephs Catholic church, the Ogden chapter, Knights of Columbus, and the Ogden chapter Woodmen of the World. Surviving Mr. Silverthorn are a daughter, Mrs. C. J. Jensen of Eden, three sons, Bert Conrad Silverthorn, Hugh G. Silverthorn and William S. Silverthorn, all of Ogden, five grandchildren and three great grandchildren. Physicians said a heart- - attack was the cause of death. COLLECTIONS FOR BURIAL A FORT WORTH, Tex. U.Ri Negro funeral home has offered commissioners' here court five the cents a body for the privilege of ofeven burying Negro paupers, fering- to furnish the shroud and coffin. The funeral home, it was explained makes up Us expenses by taking up collections among J. W. JylOtf. Town-C- all The Federal Labor Inion, 19287, meeting will be held Wednesday night at 8 o'clock at the Court House instead of Tuesday as previously announced. Hamilton, now free, is regarded as the most desperate criminal in the southwest. He was under sentences totaling more than 350 years for various hijackings, bank robbings, and killings. swayed a hundred feet to an alley ) t PRIEST USED PEN NAME Mass. (UR) The THORNDIKE, Rev. Chester F. Leahy, local Catholic priest, has done considerable writing under the pen name of Brandon Brian, . About Town at 4:30 p. m. to bring him his supper, tied him up and taking Brazelton'g keys, freed the other five prisoners. With each a gun, rbtained in a manner unknown, they rushed three guards which they encountered one by one in their dash for the walls. The three escaped convicts were lust reported seen south of Ksciiie Rex Dibble, former Logan youth, now residing in Palo Alto, Calif., has sufficiently improved from his serious accident last spring that he has been removed to his home, according to word received here. Mr. and Mrs. Dibble were in a car which overturned and caught fire. Mr. Dibble was burned seriously, being pinned under the car for several minutes before he was rescued. Mrs. R. K. Dibble, his mother, returned from his bedside Thursday. According to a message she received today he will be able to return to his work at Stanford ; University on August 1. Hearing for Bryant Telford of Lewiston, charged with persistent violation of the liquor law, will be held in the City court this afternoon before Judge Jesse P. Rich. Telford was arrested on July 8, following a raid of his home, in which 73 pints of liquor were confiscated. He is out under a 1500 bond. The surest, was the second iu two weeks for the Lewiston man. His first case, in which he is charged with liquor possession, was bound over to the First District court, where it will come up some time in August. (By United Press) HUNTSVILLE, Texas, July embyronic John Dillingers all roamed the southwest today. Hamilton, member of Raymond the Clyde Barrow-Bonni- e Parker gang of bank robbers and murand with Joe Palmer derers, Blackie Thompson, escaped in an automobile driven by a "onfeder--t,- who waited outside the walls of the death house at the Texas state prison. Charley Frazier, a "lifer in the death house broke jail for himself and his five pals, all under life sentences, but wag shbt by Guard D. W. Roberts as he was about to drop from the top of the high wall surrounding the prison. He is not expected to live. Whitey Walker was killed and Roy Johnson wounded with Fraz-ie- i. n, Two women in the line of fire fell with Imlli t wounds. Stumbling, his eye already glinting, Uilliuger dove dear to the line of guns, Rex Dibble Recovers From Serious Injury HEARING SET FOR TODAY T Frazier overpowered Lee Brazel-toguard, as he entered his cell , Men, women and children screamed and trurnpled each other in flight. Two .45 calibre slugs went into the outlaw's chert. He whirlAnother slug ed, he stumbled. burned into the imek of his neck. Women STRATO-FL1GH- TELFORD 23-T-hree The IIEKKM Ml IKK EAGER TO DIVE 5 MILES FROM DESPERADO FREE mm HEAT WAVE AREA 14.000.- JULY 23, 1934. 35 For guitar lessons rail 533 Second West. South parachute leap will be a feature of the Kepuer-Stevestratosphere flight if the balloonists agree to the proposal of Capt. Orvll Anderson, alternate pilot, above. Anderson would make the bop with them as a scientific aide, then, as "human ballast," ball out at the greatest altitude from which a parachute jump ever baa been attempted. live-mil- e BLOWOUT DELIVERED K.O. ST. CLAIRS VILLE, O. U'.K) A heavy thunderclap struck St. Clairs-vill- e one noon. In front of a garage, a youth working on an automobile fell over m a faint. Onlookers believed him a lightning victim. Contrarily, Dr. O. V. Porterfield found a piece of inner tube in the youths ear, diagnosed the accident as a shock from a blowout which happened to occur simultaneously with the thunder crash. The youth declined his name. seven-year-o- ld with the ll.tCTR.IC is no fire danger A tth a Coleman Automatic Iron. Its your beat fire tnaurance policy because the accurate, de pendable Coleman Thennoatat keeps the iron from becoming overheated; never reaches a tempera rure at winch it will Matt a fire. SOCIAL STATIONARY YOUR stationary, here, will Mndwletam cools. Miettiee cracked Ups. Keep them smooth CLARK & EARL We .. , , , The thennoatat automatically ahuta off the current when the iron reaches the temperature at which it is act; turns it oo again when the iron starts is cooL Prevents scorching of clothes . you can always have just the heat you need for any kind of ironing. Sava current, reduces your electric bill . . . does MORE than the ironing. Beautifully definish. signed; ? ? are invited to come in and this beautiful Colemanlrtm. The low price will surprise ytnd You see REEDS RITE-WA- Y STORE N. A. LARSEN Job Printers MENTHOL'ATUM IR.O 'THERE Quick Service Moderate Prices htly. Khiiomatic ' LIPS TPiyl ' Coleman WE create just the impression of refinement and good taste you desire. (JiackecL . or Jy23. Reed Stoddard, son of Mrs. Roscoe Stoddard, while playing on the Central playgrounds Sunday, fell from the acrobatic rings and broke his arm. Ellwyn A n Print Anything! HARDWARE (it8COMFORTDy4 Copyright. 1934. 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