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Show 4 A isMaS THE PAGE TWO. HERALD-JOURNA- LOGAN, UTAH, L, SATURDAY, AUGUST 25, 1931 HUEY LONG IS CLEANING UP NEW ORLEANS The S 3a (1 'Proclaim GONE ARE THE DAYS HERALD-JOURNA- L Published every weekday afternoon by the Cache Valley Newspaper Co, at 75 West Center afreet, Lcgan, Utah. Telephone 50. Price 5 cent a copy. By mail, in Cache Valley, 12.50 a year; outside Cache Valley, $5.00 a year. By carrier, 10 centa a month, $3.50 a year. matter at the postoffice Entered as second-clas- s at Logan, Utah, under the act of congress, Varch , We raise our voice in roundelays, Of long ago we chant our praise. Beneath thy shade we love to cling. 0, good old days ! Of thee we sing. Howdy, folk! When ing Ideal Beach, always wear B extra-larg- e pair of shoes. After two or three trips, you earrjr enough sand home In them to make a nice sand pile for the kiddies. Liberty thru 1879. ail the land" Member United Pres, N F A Service. Western The Liberty Bell. Features and The Scripps League of Newspapers. LEAVE NATURE ALONE When men with jobs were glad to trade A dollar for a hoe or spade. And every pocket held a ten. Them wuz the days, away bak when, visit- - But, then alas, those times are gone, Tis but their ghost that lingers on. The business man stands by and squints, With legs all bound with tape and splints. Admiral Byrd has discovered a vast new territory in the Antarctic, it la announced. a wild But bow in hsck is he going to down get it defrosted TO ENJOY IT MOST was a most attractive photograph. It showed waterfall, toppling over a rocky ledge and foaming into a gorge whose banks were covered with virgin timber. Everything in view looktd, presumably, just as it did centuries ago, before there was a white man on the continent. The paragraph of printed matter that accompanied the picture said that this waterfall was on the Tahquamenon river in thu upper peninsula of Michigan. A movement was afoot to turn the region into a state park, it was said; and t!u place is difficult to reach at then came this sentence present, but a highwuy will be built to the falls if the park IT, lie spends good coin to advertise And lauds his products to the skies. , i4 -i CANDIDATE FtlK THE POIHON IVY CUB He racks his brain and combs his wits, Rut business still Gives him the Ritz, AMOS T.BLOOP of Benson,' Amos is the kind of who, And when he shuffles off this coil, With bones beneath six feet of soil, Lets hope his time will not be spent Down in the place where business went. ED. TUTTLE. gink when you get a puncture out driving, offers to wipe the windshield while you change the tire. FACTS AND FIGURES FOR 1934 t Newe Record Lows is O. K.d. back in flappers bathing The would auto to go places by , And while all of us who like suits. of reach within Peruvian bonds. be glad to have one more beauty spot put Radio Jokes. arent if we wonder to us to our summer tours, it occurs Peace hopes. overdoing this business of putting roads into the wilderness, just a little. GOOD of the charm of some of these wild spots Is prrt their isolation the fact that they are not only unspoiled, but that they are so hard to get to that people dont get a chance to spoil them. We have built so many roads in the last decade that it is A New Record Highs Taxes. The nations blood pressure. The price of whisky. Democratic hopes. s - ABIGAIL APPLESAUCE SEZ not for- tVhy hard to think of any beauty spot which the casual motorist got all this war cannot reach. And while this is, in the main, an excellent debt business, and turn th old thing, we might reflect that once you make a wilderness just war in on th thoroughly accessible, it ceases to be a wilderness. next one that There ought, in other won's, to he some areas which Comes, along?" cant be reached by car; sjMits which one must penetrate s afoot, of with a pack horse, if one is to see them at all, and SONG OF SUMMER which contain no tourist cabin.-- or general stores. You can have your gnats and . At the sacrament meeting Sunday evening the waid bishopric was reorganized. Bishop Moses Christofferson with his counselors J. W. Seamons Jr, and Joseph Feterson, Clerk Irvin KendeU were released and Harold E. Bergeson as bishop with was sustained Sheldon P. Eppick and Daniel L. Macey as counselors, and Byron Hanson as ward clerk. The entire Benson stake presidency, H. Ray Pond, Sauel E. Hyer, A. W. Chambers and S. W. Hendricks were in atendance at this installation of the new bishopric and spoke highly of Bishop Christoffer-son'-s work as a leader of the ward. Many relatives and friends attended the funeral of Alonzo Andersen at Hyrum. Mr. Andersen died at the home of his niece Mrs. Nancy Rasmusson of a heart attac which occurred very gud- deniy. He has lived here with relatives part of his time for the (Continued from page one) fleas. beach On swampy approaches, Adviser Calvin Hoover. Calling at bees beneath the his office one morning, a con. and be a few prizes for those who are willing to And ante there trees tused cotton farmer asked to see LET . . Other Mr. Herbert Coolidge it, a few bits of wilderness which we can never And skeeters, flies onand roaches. my back Hoovers In Government service are Ill sit and yawn see if we arent game to park the car and hike a bit. lawn, J. Edgar Hoover, efficient direcA recent editorial in Nature Magazine stressed this very ; Neath summer stars at home, tor of the justice departments diale of wont a who With are golden vision of investigation; Dickerson gallon pall people point. It remarked acidly that there All topped with creamy foam! N. Hoover, assistant director of be satisfied until the crest of every mountain range is and the bureau of navigation scarred by a skyline highway or scenic boulevard, and it Todays Fable; Once uponrac-a steamboat inspecUon; and LeClaire a was newspaper time there Hoover, chief accountant of the pleads for preservation of some wilderness area in their ing commission. . . trade expert who played his own federal ndtiiral, roadless state. selections. Coolidgeg in Federal employ Include tbe Senator from This doesnt mean that we must' stop making mountain Marcus Allen Coolidge; and forest accessible to the auto. It is simply a reminder YE DIARY of the and the undersecretary do we we if and can that we too build many roads, that treasury Thomas Jefferson Cool doth Daune Brew two these Thy evening gentlemen idge. Though shall rob ourselves of something very much worth continue her search for the deOai trace their lineage back to a bill she did place in a books a common ancestor, they declare month ago and then forgot, and they are "only very remotely" relast few years. vollated to the late President. she doth look through every Mrs. W. J. Harrison, Mrs. Well ume In oar smalt Jibrarle, but can -T-WOCENT STAMP James, Mrs. Pete Petersen, and flnde It not, which do not be far Lord! I did ftade and Postmaster-GenerFarleys re- Mrs. Harold Homer, Mrs. Clayton alof Russians, we are naturally, inclined strange, the of pend It last Michaelmas Day, to cent boast that his department Hogan, county officers WHEN we think had closed tbe fiscal year with a womans department of the coming beit do say naught of tht picture them as grim and terfifying people. heavdo It has lead, $5,000,000 Dame Brew, lest already county fair to be held in Logan in surplus The word Russian inevitably calls to mind a picture en protect started a movement in Congres- early September. They were me, to hyghworde! in in, else sional of the terest of the or return a for historical some such or The quarter Terrible figure of Ivan coming event. two-celifea even' with Indiana's to RepreHow stamp. get Mr. Bolshevik of revolutionary days or the g a Louis Ludlow says that and and Mrs. ofHarvey Christensen guard go to his beach' and drowD sentative Logan called on if iron ruler of present-da- y he will offer a bill friendsdaughter Russia, Stalin. yourself. here Thursday evening. ' to this effect . . . Llcvd GarFrom what we see of Communists in America, we could FMrs. H. - Christensen and Miss chairAll hands on deck to crank the rison, dynamic also safely say that they are as humorless a group of people starboard man of the new National Labor Madeline Christensen of Portland, binnacle! Relations Board, was a Harvard Oregon, are house guests at the as could be found anywhere. classmate of Quentin Roosevelt, home of Mr. aad Mrs. G. Andrew mammoth of read we a Hence it is with interest that fhe late Teddy's younger son, Andersen. NEWS SCIENCE shot down over the German lines. air circus that was conducted at Moscow. i Recent licenses anDate To Garrison enlisted in the Navy, nounce themarriage of Miss June Keeping Up As a climax to a series of daring feats and exhibitions, marriage served throughout the war as an Jensen, daughter of Mrs. N. F. a jazz orchestra of ten pieces was droppfed front airplanes States enlisted man A national camExperts of the United have Jensen of Cornish and Milton repaign is soon to be launched for Claud by means of parachutes. As the musicians landed, they department of agriculture LaPray of Weston. of lotteries. An predicted that unless mea- the legalisation cently and their instruments began playing. opened the organisation I la the process of J. W. Seamons, Jr., and famsures Are taken to Somehow this picture doesnt fit with our preconceived western plains with a crop that being formed, to agitate for the ily attended the Seamon's reunion il in its enactment of such a law at the last Saturday at Crystal Springs. light notions of Russia. It seems that the citizens of the U.S.S.R. will hold the Mr. and Mrs. Bryon Bergeson time is not far distent coming session of Congress , the place, rto longer take themselves quire so seriously. They covered Oval Room ere thrilled to announce the birth when our once prosperous wheat The will resemble the now being used as the Presidents of a son Monday morning August learning to laugh and that is a good thing for the world. and corn belt desert favorite 19, at their home here in Cornish. , temporary office was tho great Sahara Abraham Lincoln. Mrs. Bergeson is attended at her During the 'present drought chamber of most hectic days of home by a nurse. the top soil has become pulverised During the and the the Cicil War Lincoln would go to Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Dunkley of from over cultivation This it for few fine, sun. a solitude and Whitney, Idaho, visited their new the minutes of beams steady black soil had nothing to hold it rest. grandson last Monday. in place, and the constant air curMrs. Ephrium Bergeson, daughWOMEN va KEVGFISH rents which swept these plains The Women's committee of Lou- ter, Audrey, and granddaughter, have moved thousands of tons of some of which isiana, inveterate foe of Kingfish Shirley Baker, arrived home Monit. in huge drifts, day morning from Wyoming after HolLong, has hired "Johnny" in feet are twenty depth. lit the a week visiting Mr. and 1 spending storms" former senate dust land, these of wake chairman cf the Committed log Mrs. Osmer Hancock at Silver committee to direct .BY RODNEY DUTCHER havsoil Investigator, best the left sandy soil, of its war against the states pobtical Bow. They made the trip by SEA 8rvl Corrsdes Completion ing been carried eastward as dust over-lorThese boys, all In tlifelr 20s, motor. For many years S H Ii N G T ON Naturally, particles. WAevery lipdy wax confused when undoubtedly have gained la Mr. and Mrs. Roy Richmond with the late, crusading Tbe seriousness of. this Situa- Senator Tom valuable experience in those Walsh, Holland cre- brought their little son, Boyd, be seen. Dr. W. J. can tion readily Sen. Hugh Johnson took Col. call--n- g Important NRA posts Which of the Washington ated a sensation last year by home the early part of last week Humphrey, George A. Lynch Into NRA, face publicly and to Huey's from the Budge hospital. He is them make money will weather bureau, estimated recenthim the best thinker In the later help calling him a rat" . . . AAA improving at this writing. on. But its reasonable to ly that 300, 000, 000 tons of fine top executives are still United States army," and it le on Mr. Clarence and Miss Marjorie working soil had been whipped off the next believe the jobs could have reduction Silver of Salt Lake years - acreage aime knows that Lynchs army been done as well by socially western plains and carried eastCity, arrived but Dora." their plans, "Dumb estimate;, was private one alckname day here Wednesday evening to visit ward by strong winds. In obscure fellows who needed elimination the of envisage the fell only in much dust L. H. Baker. Mrs. I stUl cant ahed very alone, 6,000 tons of work. 15,000,000 acres as compared to at the home of city of Chicago. Most of this dust this year's 40,000,000 . . . Privates Baker and Iris Baker motored with light on this seeming discrepancy, and Montana in had its origin in tbe OCC are officially known them to McCammon, Idaho, where though Lynch was in full titular DU. WALTON HALE HAMILother states west of the MississipClarence remained with Allen month charge of NRA for about aand of the NRA pi river. Clouds of dust were swept as "pea vies," from the tool they Baker at the chairman TON, has Bergeson sheep camp carry. It is a pie with an iron while Johnson was away at a Council,-haBaltimore, over party eastward Advisory week-enthe tor book on used by woodsmen, been administrative officer of lunch at the Tally-h- o D. C, and on over the and called it,a Tavern and Mr. and Mrs, Dell Thomas and peavy . . . No matNRA for quite a while. Atlantic ocean. watted 40 minutes for service. ter how hot the weather, Iowa-bor- n family spent last week end visitwestern knew If plains one the Originally After eating, the group figIt might be helpful Secretary Wallace still cling3 ing Mr. and Mrs. Roy Burnham at were covered by coarse grasses to woolen clothes . . ", He peela Dairy Creek, Idaho. more about other minds in the ured out the value to the govshallow top soiL bis coat and works in the held which ernment of their wasted time Mrs. Rulon Jensen of Salt Lake army. should but land this that agres of Experts linens ar not for were business visitors here last A West Point classmate at regular rates and facesome similar crop him. with be planted week. Johnsons, the colonel is a tiously sent a note to the manfor a few years, or that at best, Miss Glenda Bingham spent her of crops should be pracager asking that the total rotation STURGEON WET vacation visiting .relatives in Ogabout half the check be dehonest, slow, studious, cauticed, planting certain acres in former Assistant Dodds, Nugent and Salt Lake City. to Attorney-Genergentleman ducted. wheat one year, then sowing init an under Hoover, den tious, Mrs. Mary Bingham and Thelra l as turned inventor. In his spare , who is slow to pick up things. He When the manager refused to some grass crop the next, soil on this time since retiring from official Bingham of Los Angeles have sever knew much except the army discuss it, Hamilton and his group effort to retain all i'fe he has produced an automatic leturned to their home on the and is a poor administrator who, left without paying a cent Ham- the land. desk rack for stenographers, to coast after visiting relatives and knows usually nevertheless, ilton, processor of law at Yale, CITY COFFERS FILLED be used in copying . . . Showing friends in Cache county. They more from advice to take enough gleefully hopes for a lawsuit. how deceptive may be the ballot have been at the home of Mr. and T.Ri d folk. JOHNSON CITY. Tenn. of the average voter, the coastal Mrs. Gilbert Bingham. VTILLIAM FARNSWORTH, ex-- j Johnson City found itself In an counties of North Carolina polled Mr. and Mrs. Durant and Mr. O EORGANTZATION Is likely ti ecutive In charge of NRA unusual but pleasant condition a heavy wet vote in the state and Mrs. Kent went to Brigham It fiscal year. the of close referendum on at the But actual- last week-en- d mean the departure of NRAs amusement codes, was once a profor fruit. in excess of ly these countiesrepeal. were no werter Mrs. Arthur Price recently rethree young "crown princes ducer. He had a play, The Big had collected $30,040 in many than the rest of North Carolina. time first the expenses, Johnny Swope, son of Gerard Pond," and took it for a tryout Iteason was that sturgeon are turned from the coast after spendyears. the past three months visiting Swope and chief of the NRA Field to Great Neck, Loug Island, star off he North Carolina ing caught sister, Mrs. Taylor and family. Section, Lieut. Kilbourne John- ring a young actress who shower GORKY AWARD PLANNED coast, and are a gold mine fer terMrs. ston, son of General Johnson, promise. fishermen if there is any nationAugust Larson and Mrs. official aide" .to the adminis- MOSCOW (r.P In the name of al demand for caviar (made from Mark Brown of Richmond motored After the tryout he fired the Union's t rater and former chief of the Maxim Gorky, the Soviet sturgeon roe). In Prohibition days here Monday and visited at the girl for obvious lack of experithe Moscow there were few caviar outstanding writer, established canapes. Compliance Section, and Robert ence. He recall, rather wistfully, an Rut with Union has Prohibition K. Straus, son o. Amhassidor-to-Franc- e repealed, that her name was Katharine Writers award 10,000 roubles to figured the canny fishermen, of the high as $3 a pound for roe, and pnual Jesse St runs and rpeciai Hepburn. It did a single sturgeon be given the author of the sea- demand should return may have 101 assistant to Johuson as well as (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) sons Prices this year have ranged as best play. pounds of it. ? t Massa-ebuset- s, NOW WE KNOW THEYRE HUMAN al nt bomb-carryin- i . ... nt top-so- blue-clo- s 8 th Code-Makin- g. d d. shirt-sleeve- light-weig- d, agile-minde- h " ... A tome of Mrs. G. A. Andersen. Mr. and Mrs. Mikelson of Arizona and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Miles of Preston, were luncheon guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harve Miles last Thursday. The Mikelsons were en route to Driggs, Idaho, where Mr. Mikelson will instruct in the schools at that place. Mr. and Mrs. Elden Levitt and Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Baker left last Sunday morning to visit relatives in Tremonton and Ogden. They returned home Tuesday evening. While in Ogden they were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Baker. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Bambrough end family, Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Pike and family, Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Baker and family and other girl friends motored to Dow-naSprings last Sunday afternoon and enjoyed a dip in the waters. After bathing a nice luncheon was enjoyed by the party at the delightful resort. Blacksmith Fork canyon claimed as their guests for the past week, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Petersen and family, and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Day of Bishop and Mrs. W. Seamons of Hyde Park, Mr. and Mrs. Stan Chipman and Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Reeder of Logan were guests of Mr .and Mrs. J. W. Seamons Jr, on Sunday. ta CIVIL SERVICE Mrs. Vivian 'Smith entertained the members of the KeOra club at her borne Saturday afternoon A delicious luncheon was served at 2 oclock after which bridge was played. Those present were Mesdames Sarah ciub members: Funk. Blanch Reese, Lilia Munk. Inid Reese, Agatha Ballard, ConEmma Thain, Ar.n nie Thain, Thain and Edith Munk, and the Mri. following special guests. Avon Lamb and Miss Euialia Lee Bernt-soof Hyde Park, Mrs. Luna and Mrs. Leatha Lundahl of Logan, Mrs. Lorraine Fulkerson of Srtiithfield, Mrs. Rilla Smith, Mrs. Rinda Parson and Mrs. Gene Reese of Benson. High score prize was won by Mrs. Lorraine Fulkerson and all cut prize went to Mrs. Connie Thain. Mr. and Mrs. Clare Mortenson of Salt Lake City were Benson visitor Sunday. They motored up to gel their daughter Beryl who summer has been visiting this vith relatives and friend George Lemon of St. George has Keen visiting witth his daughter Mr. and and Mrs. George Thain. Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Reese deft early Monday morning for where Mr. Detroit, Michigan Reese will purchase a new school bus. Enroute they will visit the worlds fair. Melvin Lemon of Rochester, N. Y, spent Monday at the home Mr. and Mrs. George Thain. Mr. Lemon is a brother of Mr9 Thain. Otto Porter and Norman Funk returned Saturday evening lroin a weeks trip to Escalante, Utah, in company with Ray Moosman of Smithfield. Lowell Jensen of Pocatello is a guest of Gene Beutler during the week. Ross, five year old son of Mr and Mrs. Foster Reese, fell from a horse Sunday evening, breaking his right arm in two places. At sacrament meeting Sunday evening the speakers were Elders William Toombs and J. Cash Smith. The meeting was in the form of an investigator of the gospel and an L.D.S. missionary in the mission field answering questions. Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Reese and son Cecil and Blaine Lamb of Hyde Park motored to Cornish Sunday and spent the day with Mr. and Mrs. John F. Reeder. w . o- . EXAMS ARE SET The United States Civil Service Commission has announced open as folcompetitive examinations lows: Junior civil service examiner, $1,620 a year, Civil Servile Commission. College graduation from "cultural course, as disor from vocational tinguished professional course, required; senior students admitted. Closing date, September 11, 1934. Junior technologist (milling and to $2,000 baking investigations), a year, Bureau of Plant $2,500 Industry, . Department of Agriculwith ture. College graduation, major in cereal chemistry including at least 6 semester hours in technology, milling and baking required. Closing date, September 20, 1934. Associate cotton technologist, to $3,800, assistant cotton .a to $3,200 technologist, $2,600 nomtes, Department of Agriculture. Optional subjects are (1) Yarn and fabric manufacture and (2) Fiber technology. Closing date, September 20, 1934. The salaries named are subject to a deduction of not to exceed 5 per cent during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1935, asameasuie of economy, and also to a deduction of Sta per cent toward a retirement annuity. All States except Iowa, Verand mont, Virginia, Maryland, the District of Columbia have received less than their quote of in the apportioned appointments oepartinental service in Washing ton, D. C. Full information may be ob tained from Albert O. Anderson, States Secretary of the United Civil Service Board of Examiners, at the post office in this city. $3.-20- AAA OUTLINES ACREAGE Misses June Ballard and Helen Roundy entertained the members of their Sunday school class at a wiener roast on Sunday evening. Twenty-twguests were present. Games wqre played around the bonfire. Hyrum Cardon motored to Salt Lake City on Saturday morning to attend the funeral services of Mrs. Mae C. Merrill, wife of Clar' ence E. Merrill. Sisters Hickman, Woodland, and Weston of the stake board Primary were visitors at aur Primary on Monday afternoon. The members of the Lark and Seagull classes under the supervision of Mrs. Retta Roundy and Mrs. Lydia Nuttall enjoyed a swimming party at Logana on Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Reese and two children of Logan and Mr. and Mrs. Ira Moosman and Otto Porter weie guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Reese on Sunday even-,in' g Misses Berneta and Afton Reese entertained at a canyon oarty on Tuesday evening. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. 'Ira Moosman, Mr. and Mrs. Leon Reese, Mr. anil Mrq. Lowell Reese, Mr. and Mrs. Arvel Reese, Mr. and Mn Robert Reeder, Jodie Smith, Lenus Jorgensen of Benson, Mr. and Mrs. Machael Erickson and Norval Erickson of Beaver Dam, Mr. and Mrs. Gienn Archibald, Mr. and Mrs. Elvin Jorgensen, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Lundquist cf Lrgan. Mrs. Charles Jay, and Mrs. Percy Wright of Ogden, and Miss Edm. Green of College ward. Mrs. Charles Jay and Mrs. Percy Wright of Ogden are spending a few days with Miss Berneta Reese, fur. and Mrs. Norman Seamons and Kenneth Seamons of Benson and Miss Helen Hancey of Hyde Park spent Friday in Brignam of Mr. guests Lee. and Mrs. Ernest ADD 250 CATTLE KILLERS EAST ST. LOUIS, I1L (UiD Because of the heavy run of government cattle and the company's own purchases. Swift and Company has put 250 additional cattle killers to work at the local here. plant PREFERRED PRISON NASHVILLE, Tenn. (li!i Tennessee State penitentiary is so attractive to its inmates that six prisoners returned voluntarily aft er escaping. They admitted that freedom had Mts disadvantages Curing an economic depression. V H ritf FoAMK (UWlSHCN Beaches - Mountains Theatres and Business All Within Few Minutes Y unkershimYatj; pedersen tSMMcii.il. cms ''Resident Manager h. r. milEakd' Resident Manager hotel CARDINAL Ham oka SALS ALTO, tMM rt. The NEWHOUSE HOTEL y A Distinctive Residence Mrs, 3. H. Waters. " President An Abode . . . renowned Throughout the West t Salt Lake s Most Hospitable Hotel Incites You PLANS ( By Vnitrd Press) OfWASHINGTON, Aug. 24 ficial announcement was made ted ay of the farm administration decision to seek a 1933 whea trop of about 775,000.000 bushels by asking a 10 instead of a 15 per rent acreage reduction. About acres of the best wheat area of 66.000.000 acres are governed by AAA limitation cop tracts. Planting of 90 per cent or more than 46,000?": .. juld be authorized by the plan. TH! Hotel Newhouse W. E. SUTTON General Manager CHAUNCEY W. WEST Assistant General Manager Q |