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Show UKtlilKli UTAH -- Fair tonight cloudiness. Werines-increasin- g "'Herald-- 1 Colder ow tonight and WedColder Wednesday, and .a north portion tonight. iDAHO-Sn- nesday. Volume Numlier oO. ."1. An Independent New Hpaper Thanksgiving Day j l -- -- vI --V W,! y House Group Reports '7 Z Vw", WASHINGTON, 7 - y Wj i; iif X . J.- v tsi , military affairs committee today unanimously reportdefense ed a $376 000,000 national is - . ?K - .ft - S J VHSf Fnemployment Problem m ' Chairman Andrew J. May, it D, i y bill s $376,1X10,000 Ky . said the figure was exclusive of $100,000,-Ooasked by President Roosevelt for purchase of critical war maHa terials se h as ammunition. said the measure will be called up in the house for action Thurs' day. ; " , wr J3T ' t , Vv 1 6 tv -- nv Tj 4 s t-- 7;, ' lf V :f x. e members said the for critical materials, is authorized in existing legislatCommittee J 4 . & L ' h - ' 4 'j v. f Authorization for $32,500,000 to be educational orders placed with private industry. $. Authorization for expenditure of $23,750,000 on Panama Canal defenses and including seacoast defenses and army barracks. in the armys 4. An increase peace-tim- e strength from 165.000 to 205, uou men to provide an defense force initial emergency of at least 400,000 men when the is included. The national guard was ugul.ir army authorization for 2.514 additional officers, 603 reserve officers. 36, 28 enlisted men and 808 flying cadets. 5. A system of training pilots in tfhrverrtties, college ami other educational institutions which are accredited by the war department to cost $10,000,000 annually. v 4 h snow-fight- MUTUALS PRESENT PLAY WEDNESDAY O 5 P n i p ! Wednesday at 8.15 p. m in Nibley Hall the Logan stake M men and Gleaner organization will dramatic present their annual The Servant in the production. House" bv Charles Rann Kennedy It is a drama of five acts which display the effect Christian ideals have on the reactions of individuals. are: Characters represented James Pasonhv Makeshpfte, D. D The Most Reverand the Lord Bishop of Lancashire Clyde Ges-se- l. The William Reverend Kim the, the Vicar Homer Lloyd, wntic. the Vicars w ife Jeanne Fames, Mary, their niece Elnia Peterson; Air. Robert Smith, a gentleman of necessary occupation -- Leonard Young: Manson, a butler Jacob Fuhriman. With the exception of Mr Long, the entire last is composed by M men and Gleaner girls M men and Gleaner girls who have assisted with the production include: properties and vostunus, Betty Jean Fonnesbeck and Beryle Theurer; sounds, LaVcrn Young: make up. Homer Lloyd; stage management, Lowell Osmond and Alan Fonnesbeck, prompter, Della Mae Peterson. J. Karl Wood. Jr. is directing the play Miss Ann Keddo is assisting with the direction. Stake officers in charge of production are Betty Jean Fonnis-becstake Gleaner president; Beryle Theurer, stake Gleaner Loyal Cook, stake M men president. The purpose of the play is to give diurnal ic experience in acting and production to M men and Gleaners and also to gain money for the stake M men and Gleaner girls spring formal banquet. The public is urged to attend. HYRUM MAN FACES COURT CHARGE ii y snow-removi- Grateful at any respite from the horrors of war, these Catalonian women kneel in public thanksgiving prayer after Rebel troops captured their city One of Gen Francos victotious xoldioix is seen at le :. 2. ft Loyalist Leader Decides To Continue To Fight Franco GETS APPOINTMENT WEST POINT TO LONDON, f ell. 7 (U Ri The Siianish embassy announced tonight that the Republican government of Premier .liian NT grin is returning to Valeneia to establish a eapital and continue resistance ill central Spain. Kgan. who has been atFRENCH SPANISH PERPIGNAN, tending the West Point IVepara-torFeb. 7 U 15 FRONTIER, Tn school San Francisco, has anish-nationalist troops captuicd received his appointment to West Figueras and Rosas, a few miles Point Academy in New York by from the French frontier today, as Senator King and will enter the reports were circulated that the academy in June. loyalist morale in central Spain Mr. Egan, who is the son of Mrs. was cracking and that definitive Annie Egan of Nibley, graduated collapse of the loyalist cause might from the North Cache high school be near. in 1H35 and enlisted in the U. S Meet Sails army service in PJ37. He was staEntering Port Rosas, 12 miles tioned at Eort Douglas for a brief below the frontier, the nationalist period before entering the West troops forced the loyalist fleet Point Preparatory school, where there to evacuate and seek refuge he has been for the past six either at French ports or to hazmonths ard a cruise down the coast to Va leneia or Cartagena. Travelers said the nationalists might reach the frontier opposite Scfcow Le Perthus and Cerhere tonight thus closing the last highways to France. The nationalists had held their men back since Sunday, to give loyalist troops and civilians lime to evacuate to France. At dav.n Wairen Si how, member of the today they moved forward and Logan stake Young Mens board quickly took Figueras anil Rosas Coincident ly the retreat of the who previous to I ha, position was led supi rintendent of i ve Seventh loyalists into Fiance was (Continued On Page 8i wind Mutual, was named activity slake counselor in the Logan YMMIA supormtendoiioy last night at the leadershiu meeting. The vacuncy in the superintendent y was caused when S Rich-mav ill conM noi F H Young was moved from that office to superintendent He tinue divussum on oiicntaiion bi Wallace Set rist who retned fore' the Reserve Officers ("oh si because of ill health ArtiUery .school We.lnesri iy mht at 7 30 S. L Milton was installed as secThe mt tins vull be held at the1 retary m the slake Young Mens AuL yo hijih schrid armoiv All organization, replacing LeRoy office! s arc in voted to he became a di rson. who recently stake high councilman. Lloyd -- y -Sp- Warren In M.I.A. Presidency To Continue Class For Reserve Officers n 1 suc-leei- ls Local Duo Pianists Thrill Large A ppreciatioe Audience -- PROF. X. B W.CllKITI NNEX namo1 range The restless singe of tin SchuIt was a decided tribute to mann coneerlo found a capable Frances Winton ("hump and exponent in Mi.s Rogers, prom Rogers Logans talented pthe mipiessivr opening to t lie ianists who ATondav evening prebreathless finish to loninntiusin of sented their first and efin the Logan tabernacle, to the romposer was sincerely have so large an audience brave fectively portrayed Frcpi the .standpoint of the lisone of the worst storms that has to see the it was interesting swept this sect toil this winter to tener personalities of two composes attend their concert and Kilmmann unfold so It was an enthusiastic audience diffeicntly notwithstanding the fact too. that greeted the two local artchose the same vehicle ists in their initial appearance as that they same tonalitv for (heir The artists should ami the duo-pian- o con--e- rt ts expression of musical ideas The contrapuntal experiments of ed to the layman as well as the Guv Maier of the two Chopin etudes, Black Key Etude and Robert Zillcs, 33, of Hvrum, vull musician Etude, and the Brown arThe audience was especially reappear before City Judge E M to the propriety of Grieg rangement of Dvoraks 'Humor-eske- " sponsive were very effective Wright Friday charged with steal- the abandon of Schumann, the The artists caught the fancy of ing a harness from ths property massiveness o( Tselmikow sky, or of George G Nielsen of Hynim. the intriguing rhythms of Lecuonn the audience with the vivid tangos After insistent apAcording to he Cache county Whether soloist or accompanist of Lecnona sheriff department, Zillcs allegedly mli player gave a finished per- plause the 'For Quo To Vas" retook the harness last Tuesday. Evi- formance Other numbers placid as duet peated In the strtetlv dence pointed to his guilt, and when work they cooperated intelligently cm ores wete Waltz in A flat ma- e Sheriff Jeff Stowell went to arrest cii and Chopins producing a delightful tone jor bv Brahms him. they found he hud thrown the mixture No 7 harness into a creek about a nulc It is certain that audiences in In the rendition of the Grieg north of llyrum Accompanied by and the concert i o' her rities will he given an Tschaikowsky the sheriff and Mr. Nielsen, Zillcs Mrs musical offering when these proved herself enu.il later pointed out the place he had to theChamp It is equally demands of the motor artists appr'ir there disposed of the stolen property works for piano, bringing out the certain that the L' gan lucllem e c "hen pressure became to severe s with an on hes-tr- will cageily await their next heavier Neilscn signed a complaint of ranee here sonority, and reserving for the tenThe duo-p- i mists will appear in larceny against Zilles, and Ivnc moods tones of t"tty his Lrial was set fc r Friday In- derness Her attack exquisite was incisive a concert m C'eclat Cl'.v Thurstlav volved to the rase is Charles Sherand her contrast of power and under the direction of the Branch man, 67, also of Hynim tone miming covered a wide dy Agra ultuial College he highly 'hotel' complimented of a prog Mill whuh on their appeal- But-lerll- v I 1te-lucl- pas-age- Price Five Cents. ap-p- 'ix Feet of Snow Falls In IS Hours On AVIATOR ATTAINS DIVING RECORD SHREVEPORT, La. Feb 7 H li Second Lt Troy Keith, an was credited today with making a power dive at 670 miles an hour. Fellow pilots who checked the instruments on his plane estimated his speed at more than 11 miles a minute But Keith, who made that phenomenal unofficial record dutiug maneuvers over Caddo Lake yesterday, was not aware at the time that lie was accomplishing anything out of the ordinary-- . The reason. other aviators said, was that he probably was unconscious, although Keith does not have of losing consciousness or regaining it again His power dive rtarted when his was exhausted oxygen supplv while he was flying at an altitude of 2(Kio feet. Keith turned the nose of his pursuit plane sliaight down, and attained hi.s estimated speed of 670 milts an hour while hurtling, at he giound. At an altitude of 9.000 feet he managed to straighten out. Army officers estimated Keith's speed by taking the readings on h's v,u ious instruments. army-aviato- I , let-u- n two-ye- OliLxt e - i ' ed. for Who c c f,'T ion i a blizzard which swept Cue lie Valley uly Monel ty evening and which has continued ie abated with oc easionil snow flumes dining the day. x ite and county road crews threw every effoit towarl keeping the vhiioiis communities from being snow hound Workers lean RcmcU At rnoini today the Sar-el- i t canyon highway from Weils-villlo Brigham tily was open, ami stale snow leaning equipinen! was pal rolling the ringroads on :l hour shuts Last evening the Valiev View- highway from Logan to Collinston was momentarily choked but the g gangs fought through to release several Mailed motorists, and were running caterpillar trac-o- r plows and rucks continuously the along highways The storm began about 5 p. m a.st and for several evening, hours a northwest wind drove a sheet of snow into the swirling Valley In that time there were from 3 to 6 inches of snowfall recorded, with the official reading being slightly over three at the United States weather ohierva-torIt contained .17 of an inch moisture. Chill temperatures accompanied the wind, with thermometers registering around 20 . degrees. Steady Wind Blows Throughout ir.c:,t of the night he wind continued to blow, drifting the loose snow into the road as fast as the highway crews ould move it. This morning there was not much p in the wind velocity, and at noon Mendon, Cache Junction, Lewiston., and other county points reported that the blizzard was still raging, even though the snow flurries were being interspersed with occasional bursts of sun. In some parts of the Valley an afternoon sun had served to melt the snow sufficiently so that drifting was not so bad. ten the last During days northern Utah has experienced its worst winter weather since 1934. Temperatures during this time hit as low as 20 degrees below zero in sue h communities as Newton, Lewiston, and North Logan. At the fire station in Logan the minimum record was 11 benud-aft- 1 Vs $110.uoooo0 bji People Think m,Northwest Has Heavy Snowstorm Traffic C f The bill provides: 1. Inerease in army air strength from 2,320 planes to 5.500, giving the army authority to build up the limit as fast as funds are provid- ' Sfall.s LEROY Mvrriv.Li Press Staff ('orresMindcnl STATE CAPITOL, Salt Lake - A bill io City. Feb 7 d pci nut i aim ad rporation.s to move into he field of air transportation in Vt ch was passed by the senate of ,!lic state legislature today The hill, which was sent to the ecu ,e of lepiesentatives for its at ion, amends state laws which 'permit the railway companies to ' wn stock in and to build, opcode .uccl maintain transportation lines 'i land and sea It passed with I. 'lie imposition An unemployment and leioviy onfeieiee of legislators and dials businessmen, laborers and fanners was proposed in a joint resolution mtrodui eel in the house he Rep Sheldon R Brewster. D, Salt Luke The resolution proposed the leges I. ct n re resolve itself into a committee and invite labor and business to m it in an effort to solve Utah's unemployment problem A hill to limit dimensions ami weight cf trucks and trailers and lo regulate lighting equipment of truiks was presented to the house ly Itep Charles R. Hunter, R., lion county. Another proposed motor act would, if enacted, prevent price discrimination by retailers of motor fuel It would require the retailer to set Ins own price for the fuel and miiintain it for all purchasers. Rep H E. Smith. D, Weber, introduced an ther companion mcas-iii- e foi hi homestead coemption bill. Designed to prevent counties raising tax levies if the exemptio.i T i!4 becomes law. The companion measure would strike a proviso from state statutes which permit to increase counties maximum levies. P. S Rep. Alarthakis, D , Salt Lake, presented a bill to the hrusc which would prevent arbitrary dis-n.sal of teac hers The measure provides for hiring of teac hes after a probationary period. An intruetor completing probation would be automatically relnred from year to year unless the governing board saw fit to dismiss him. Dismissal could be accomplished only after a public homing if the teacher desired it The senate received the work- low. ing wives" bill passed by the house Weather prechcters see a cloudwhen a threatened movement for less reconsideration failed to material- stormssky tonight, with threat of again for Wednesday. ize in the house The measure would prevent tne state of its subdivisions employing men or women GIRLS whose husbands or wives were employed in private industry and making more than $xoo annually ON LODGE (I I I Wind Combining i l mtc f Tor i j house bill aulhorizing purchase of 3.OO0 neve fighting planes for the army to give the air corps a potential planel strength of .1.500 first-lin- e ; Snowfall and v Ft ah Rill Attacks xJ.5v- , U :i Freakish Blizzard Gives Cache Valley Real Winter Taste '$ a - l lleav Measure Feb 'i DESTITUTE 1 -!- i Hupre Defense a u L.rt ' 'V. .V- - V- Ac' i: i: u i i i v tufsday. onrnai Catalonia In , Uvif e ---- li j i' can, r t a li, i. i y PORTLAND Ore', Fc b 7 el pi The winters greatest snowstorm trueli the northwest today, pushed down fioni Alaska by a frigid bank of air threatening to spread a severe cold wave over the region by tonight Sport Fans Marooned The storm reached its peak in Alt Hood where a blizzard brought 76 nic hes - more than six feet of new snow to Timhcrhne Lodge la less than 48 hours A road was cleared tonew day to the government's It.iMKi.ooO resort where a score cf winter sports enthusiasts had been lemioranly isolated. The Purse seiner Sonny Boy, feared lost in a squnll off the Oregon coast last night with nine n en aboaid was reported sighted by the coast guard early today entering the Strait of San Juanele Fuca, In Washington Boats Are Warned Big shipping was nc t seriously menaced but small craft warnings woie flying from Fort Bragg, Cal. to Taltosh Island, Wash. Slules anil drifts blocked highways and broke power lines Two trucks and an automobile were trapped by slides outside Bend, Ore. , Si vie liMrhwuy officials said approximately 300 men, 248 and 25 emergency graders were working to clear Oregon trunk roads Portland's U. S. weather bureau forecast continued general snow over Washington, Oregon and Idaho ton.ght and Wednesday and warned the arctic air, moving in on heels of the storm probably Ve uld drive temperatures down near zero. one-wa- y snowf-plow- BRITISH VOTE ON THIRD TERM s Says Human Decency Dictates Care of Needy Feb. 7 WASHINGTON, Presiilent Roosevelt today warned congress th.it an unemployment relief "emergency exists and recommended immediate consideration of appropriation of $150,000,- 000 more for the Works Progress Administration Points To Emergency "In my opinion an emergency now exists." the President said in a special message asking that reconsider its decision congress of last month to reduce his deW PA relief appropriation ficiency by $l,io000,0i0 He "in human irotested any winter reduction of WPA rolls and said that from 6.01111.000 to 8,1X10,000 persons might be deprived of federal aid in the spring under the economy relief plan approved last month by congress. His estimate of the number of persons likely to be deprived of aid if congress persisted in refusing additional funds was based on a ratio of three dependents for each WPA employe. Present Holts Maintained The President announced that relief rolls would be maintained at 3, (XX), OCX) persons during February and Afarch regardless of ecoand called on nomy proposals congress for funds to permit that rate cf employment without unduly reducing the rolls later in the fiscal years. He said the facts constituting the emergency were: 1. WPA rolls should be held to the present 3,000,000 persons through February and March. (ut Would Cause Want 2. The $725,000,000 fund provided by congress, if not supplemented, would require drastic reductions of WPA rolls after April 1, with widespread want or distress. The message announced that Mr Roosevelt had signed the reduced $725,0(X),0O0 appropriation last Saturday but that he would have refused to sign it except for its provision that WPA rolls should not be reduced more than 5 per ceDt before April 1. Points To Alternative He contended the 5 per cent limitation suggested that congress was ready during February and March to "reconsider actual needs in time to increase before April for the last the appropriation LONDON. Feb. 7 ciPi The three months of the fiscal year British institute of public opinion ending June 30. today announced the result of a He said WPA had two alternacanvass of representative opinion tives under the existing approprithroughout Britain on whether a ation: third term for President Roosevelt 1. roll Reduce abruptly by I Senators Arthur O Eliott, would benefit the world. 1,000,000 April 1 and propersons e and Wendell Grover. 1', Seventy-fivWeber, per rent said it vide employment for an average Salt Lake, ml reduced a bill in the would, seven per cent said it NEW LONDON. N. H, Feb. 7 wouldn't, and 19 per cent had no of 2,000, IXX) during April, May and .senate to establish a training school GO ON June. for law enforcement officers to be I I'e- - Colby junior college girls opinion. Would Suffer Depende-nt- s conducted through tile extension have chosen U S Senator Henry re2 Commence division of the University of Utah Cabot Lodge, Jr., R. Mass., as THREATEN NEW RIOTS 1 and carry ductions April duke of their winter SAN QUENTIN honorary NEW YORK. Fell 7 6 p- i- A PRISON, Cal. through on that schedule until carnival because he possess the Feb 7 d P Warden Court Smith June 30. special federal giaid jury will be sportsm tnxhip of Donald Budge, worried today over "grapevine" reimp mi ltd late, today to investithe first, he said Regarding the smile of Douglas Corrigan ports that a new demonstration by on lint of Martin T gate the on the average every person that the and faire of the savolr Duke convicts was forthcoming followMinton whose resignation as senfrom tho rolls has discharged of Windsor" ior judge of (he Second Pnited ing collapse of a "hunger" strike dependent on him or her three Sec ond on the poll was FerdinKl ites circuit court of appeals beto "too much rorned other in protest persons in other words tho and the Bull. beef and too many beans came effective last midnight greater part of 4,000, (XX) AmeriThe fust witness will be Wilcans will be stranded," iam .1 Fallon who is serving an He said the second alternative Alma Sonne, iiulctei ruinate prison sentence for local prominent would "require that employment hanker and iiieiicbc r of the Cache commercial bribeiv by the end of June will be reIn a letter to chairman Hatton stake presidency, will be the prinduced to a tigure well below .V Sumners of the house judiel-- , cipal speaker Wednesd.fy at the 1.500.000 persons." rv committee last week. District regular nucting of the Logan rlub it was announced toAt'ornev lhomas E. Dewey said Fallon had asked Charles A. Rog-i- s day by Russell Hansen, club GANNETT insurance bioker, to lend SALT LAKE CITY, Feb, 7 (I'D priation for teachers retirement, At into1 $10,1100, adThe - The highest budget ever recom- it was the subject of Mr Sonne's promising that in ever recomreturn, Alanlon would seek to get dress will be Abraham Lincoln," mended by a governor of Utah mended bv largest a Utah CHARGES governor Linthe considered of business Rogers insurance before apnroprute in that the state legislature Growth of existing institutions the Kincs brewery then in federal coln s birthday falls on Sunday reached it, mark in its with increasing demand lifted it the half-waLust week the address at the receivership ch libeiations today, convening for to an alitiine high despite sharp ROCHESTER N Y., Feb 7 !'!) tfdunton his been s'lbpenacd to luncheon meeting was given the session's 30th day slashes m institutional requests Frank E. Gannett, newspaper before the grand jury by F P Champ. Logan financier Duhbed an "economy ses.s.on, It was about $850,000 less than row He vacated his chambers and president of the USAC board the replied in detail to finished the budget finally adopted by the publisher, legislature scarcely in the United States court yestof newspapers voiced of trustees. the piesentation of tht; chief exe- 1937 session but was well above criticisms of Interior Harold by Special musical numbers aie to cutive's charges that the state the budget recommended to erday that L. Secretary A gland jury suhpena also has he Ickes in their radio debate bv Eldon Hansen and operate piesented inits estimated within Gov. session by Henry H. Blood last Jan. 12. been i s slice for Federal Judge numbers of his hand The entire come and available Before hearing the budget messurplus before Edwin S Thomas of Connecticut, progrtm, unhiding Mr. Sonnes adGannett said he was impelled to members of the house of repre- sage, which was presented to the issue a who is at sea on his vacation dress and the musical numbers, sentatives were reply betwo that bodies of questioning the by cause The suhpena will he served on will be broadcast beginning at 12 15 Ickes allegedly strayed and contemplating an ex- their reading clerks legislature policy, at him when his ship reaches Cris- although luneh is to he served at tension of separate from the point at issue whether expenditures house the killed a measessions, or not the American press is tobal, C Z 1210 Would Raiso Pay sure proposing of funfree and mado "misleading stateThe house heard two finance eral directors. regulation ments" in their debate which measures after the governor's Would Cut Power should not go uncorrected. message was delivered but took One of two much disputed In response to Ickes charge final action on neither. One. a naturopathy bills was advanced that advertisers influence newsresolution to set legislator's pay for final consideration of the paper policy Gannett said: at $1 per day for the duration senate today as was another con"American newspapers refuso of their terms rather than $4 troversial measure which would of advertising daily during the session, was made give the power to name succes- millions of dollars Among she many who know the value and (he imMore than 500 daily every year a of business. order sors special for members of napt-rport nice to the fai mers of this section of the Farm Bureau adverrefused to The other, a hill to appropriate congress orresigned the state legislature tisements of distilled accept is .governor Henry H Blood who throughout his admiiiis-tM'io- n liquors. Tho $10,(KV) for a arts build- to county or district political comGannett newspapers accept no has been a fiuncl of the farmer This is what ing at Utah State Agricultural mittees for the party from which such advertising Governor Blood has to say. college at Logan for use of rural the resit ning officeholder was While Mr. Ickes was preparing educational assemblages wishing elected. The bill would revok) the his town hall speech, the Washto meet on the campus, became Ihi.x is a losson which the depression governor's powers to name such ington Times was launching a taught unfinished business when the suecessors. s. id. When (aimers have income they become crusade against small loan comhouse adjourned after discussing Bills introduced in the senate An immediate stimulation of business panies. it at length Rep. Selvoy J. Boy- includejd: The money lenders offered to er. D, Utah, is sponsor of the and mdustiy is felt. When industry can find a A measure to $35 000 Increase appropriate their advertising from bill for the University of Utah for $18,000 to mai Ket lor its produce laborers can find employ$40,000 a year if tho largest I Uih Budget an addition to the medic. al build senes of ment." articles was suppresses. Although tile budget proposed mg. The Times then reby tne govi rnor, totaling $7,076,-54- 6 A bill to permit employment fused Washington to accept any advertising In I'nity Theie Is Stiength! 91 for the biennium, lopped Hgencies to increase commissions from this source and threw out nearly $2 500,000 from department charged for services from eight advertising that brought in $18,-0requests and contained no appro to 20 per rent. DiSFOSED JUDGE TO 1 PirEHONORS , SENATOR TRIAL week-by-we- c Kiwanians To Hear Sonne Wednesday Legislators Would Increase Own Salary 200 Per Cent ANSWERS t. ICKES y apjr point-by-poi- Mr. Farmer: pur-cluspi- 00 annually." y B1SKV32?!Tr |