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Show dl' if LAKH gon who has money lo make such payments, but it is ait advantage to the'counly to realize from It'13 source rattier than be "compelled to i .hi.rrLiW.im-la- x. anticipation, notes. Published-AfierhooNaturally the absolute in security can be Except Bunder obtained id such investment The taxes will Pbon. Was Balt Late City. Utah. come due as certainly as time moves on. Member of The Audit 'Bureau of Circulations. Money so advanced cannot be lost under any RATES1 SUBSCRIPTION ' circumstances. " Larger taxpayer, corporaOne Week tions. and utilities may be able to borrow On .Month lher money, at a more favorable One tear 1 "One (hi (if paid la advance) . . roae a saving by this provision of .actually V.;-.- ! Single Cnplea .5?? Doubtless the commissioners of law. Idaho. the Utah to pew The aoove ratee apply would be pleased to have them do Nevada, Wyoming Oregon. Waehingto. Colothe eouniy rado. Montana Nee Mexico. California and .0- to. But any property owner who wishes Aruona; other etalaa by mall per month. II to invest little or sufficient to pay bii safely REPKESEXTANATIONAL advertising taxes may do so at g good rale of interest. tives Noee. Rothenburg A Jann. Inc. 1 GETTING MESSAGES THROUGH East 40th Street UIXAV New York City.... 160 North Mlt ibtaBAvejme i' Geoeral Motor Bund.ng of loo stringent economy. Qio-34., A I. .ml THE dep:. abiUy when applied to that- - most West 10th Street I h.in-i- u City .151 California Street Son Franctaeo. vita! department of our city. government, the Xarctu.isjgala.Ja question..!.: .police tend remittance and business communlcaSalt toko City. Utah. The fatal accident of last night, in which tlous to Tho Deseret anragf fnanw as seeminglyunavoIdabIy correspondence for public tloa to killed, attracted hundreds of the curious to the spot within a few minutes. Neither the " Entered at the poetofflce at Balt Lake City - a a eecona diass matter according to Act of police department ambulance, nor the nearest Congress. March S. 1S71. prowl carTarrived for somewhat entitled minutes from the time of the accident The Tho Assoc latcd'PremT"cluslveTynews " .go the us for republlcation ol all gathered crowds muttered audible criticisms credited to tt or not otherwise credited in new tardiness of . .the department's arriving, In thia newspaper and also the local Chief of Police W. L. Payne, interviewed on published heieln - All nghta for repubilcation reserved also her tar of special dlepatchee the sene at the moment of arrival.' answered' the immediate criticisms with the quiet JANUARY 6, 1934. SALT LAKE CITY. remark, We havebul four telephone trunk-lin- es THE GOVERNMENTS FINANCES at headquarters. These are naturally -very .minute night and day. Economy busye ROOSEVELT did not read is considered above everything else ia these PRESIDENT to Congress yesterday. limes. It contained matter that does not reach the Is economy so desperately necessary that in -- mind easily through the ear. Jufricient lelephone communication between mors effectively bY reading and citizens and police can not be made possible? thoughtful eilizen should spend time to In lest night's instantly fatal death, early absorb Its contents. There is something bard arrival et the police was desirable nly ' end aobering about such, figures, and when the streets and making an the government ia borrowing a billion a month, -- record before garbled ver-an amount that would have paid all its sions appeared. But it is only too true that a bare-feexpenses for four years during the eighties, minutes is often the margin between" -It Is well to realize whither we are going. life and death in accident emergencies. Lucid .ever, the President sets forth the financial situation plainly, particularizing on the present fiscal year, which still has practically six months to run, and the new fiscal - year, which ends Juno 30, i35i Between now BT LESLIE EICHEL and July be states we must borrow six billidn . . .. Central Press Staff Writer dollars, and at that time the year's deficit will NEW .YORK First definite upturn m be 17,309,000,000. To continue the figures, 1934 u expected by Wail Street to be in the the natthrial debt will then be nearly thirty steel and motor industries, bteel already bag tbe order. billion dollars, actually 129,847,000,000. To likely will benefit " The President project his calculations as a merger between Western Union Teleinto the fiscal year of 1935, called that begraph and Postal Telegraph seems certain. cause it ends June 30, 1935. He forecasts that Equipment Buying The federal government ia "prepared "to the national debt will have risen to nearly billion dollars, actually 831,834-,go a long way to permit railroad to speed thirty-two which wii! mark uipmenimymgLocomouve Duiiaera, 000,000, a staggering however, have given up hope of much bui- "... time peak. Bat he Lta. forth the ng ness. although improved locomotives would.. eut operating cost. thought that thereafter it will det W alker'e Role crease. Rumor has it that former Mayor Jamet While we have figures In mind, it may J. Walker of New York will be brought back be interesting to know that In 191d the public from Europe to bead Tammany Halt by Post"debt was less than one and a quarter billion. master General Jame A. Farley, who ba Ia 1919, however, it had risen to 825,482,000,000.. gubernatorial ambition. - Rumor also persist that Governor Herbert H. Lehman. of New Then through a heavy rate of income taxes it York may become eecretary of the treasury. decreased til! In 1930 it was 818,185.000,000. Jimmy Walker' income tax trouble aeera Unfortunately the early income tax rates were to have vanished. Cold Jieevlly cut, time after lime, udder Secretary. The great Metropolitan Museum of Art Andrew W, Mellonl suggestion. The public" debt could have easily been wiped out during ' in New York lost business'' during the recent-col- d spell. It immense structures couldn't that decade of prosperity. Moreover, there be kept warm. , -would have been less danger of the speeu- Gold Bootleooer -r A correspondent, L. A. Collins of New laiion which caused the panic had the inYork.- - sends this to me and 1 relay it: come rates been kept at their war time figure. The arrest of gold smuggler on the President Roosevelt believes that the credit Canadian border who are believed to have of the United States will continue good, so 'bootlegged' 81,000,000 worth of gold out of the United State calls attention to a unique and that the money can be borrowed. Hi's course in balancing the usual eipenditures.with.Jn-cor- ae unprecedented situation. Dur present taw fixes the price which mint and assay offices may lias inspired confidence in the instituray for gold at 820.67 an ounce. Meanwhile tions and people who invest in government the RFC u buying gold for nearly twice tin -bonds." Moreover, there has been a widespread amount. Since there is no open market for gold acceptance of the President's public work in the United States, the precious metal compolicy in order to put people back on an mands today two widely varying prices. jhe earning bull during the emergency. He government makes the dilinction that it buy with unquestioned eiheef ity that this newly mined gold, while the secondary' gold is being rfelimd from old scrap. program will eome to an end, insofar at least Now, gold -- as sold, and f he two kinds of" it requires borrowing, - within eighteen go!4 can be refined to exactly the same purmonths. There Will probably be no diffiity. lhere is today actually an oversupply ' culty therefore hi the government selling its of the 'secondary' gold which threatens to bonds at reasonable rates of interest. glut the market It i against the law to smuggle or bootleg gold out of the country, Another reason, besides the reassuring but the profit m such smuggling is obviously of the President, which good money-sen- se large and offers a great temptation. Tlie witi aid the government in borrowingis the bootleggers 'of liquor In the old prohibition disaster that the lending class would suffer days had no such opportunity. Tlte- government -- meanwhile hr" being-floo- ded -- if inflation were -- e arried into effertrMani-- " with complaint from the ermy of festly if the time came when money could men who use gold in the industries, arte and ioL-be borrowed to provide for millions of sciences. They contend that the gold regu- -' suffering citizens, inflation would come Rations were issued to gain control over gold held by hoarders and that this- - purpose has quickly. been fulfilled. Hoardecs are known and are To Means the cheapening of money. and I 7 pernaps the wiping out of indebtedness, the To correct ronditions it ig being urged whole financial world, whose "merchandise is that the '.government permit s free market for gold or. place All gold on tbe same baeis.- - currency end .Credit would-le- el at .far safe-t- o lend to the government than to have the" ratOAlf jANtfAK 5 1934 ) THE ACID .TEST FOR DEBATERS V. Who s N ews Intimate glimpses of persons figuring ip todays news given daily in this column by Lemuel F. Parton, special feature writer for The Deseret News. r rm J . , - --A Brooklyn court orders the Landsteines the paternity of a child. When he was ' determine to test blood awarded the NobeT prize, three years ago, Dr. Karl Landsteiner modestly suggested that his discoveries might be used for this or that they might aid detectives in identifying blood stains. f HU thirty-thre- e years study of i" for Jan. 12 at the Hotel human blood has saved many sands ot lives. Blood transfusion! commodore. U a London Innovation, both wa a made possible by hU discovery! it causes much excitement major types of! above and below stairs, it Uanoth- HU experiments er trumpet blast lu the British inhuman blood. , with ape produced a aerum" help-f- vasion. New In infantile paralysis. Anything new, or a bit outre, a- - ., concept must Beat down th crys- sails toe icsdersmp. ot Elaa Max-we-lt. tallized resistance of the legally for many years purveyor of r t d.n .......... Ny. . . over-twen- ty - The World at a Glance -- - ttfr com-forti- ul e treteeUmln-tr-JusttcMeter's 5;:iart"IiVcr;on tothehaul woude.' antiphons! response of Uw to Miss Maxwell takes off from Faria medicine, as be order the blood and Just now all good party Ideas come, from London. test. Dr. Land- ' Mrs. Field, born Audry James, From ll to steiner was pathologist of the Uni- was a London heiie. and olter to In 1921 he widow of Major Dudley Coals, versity of Viennh. the staff of the killed In the war. she was the quietly joined widow In London, a Rockefeller- - Institute for medical smartest There the tall, aloof friend of royalty, a memser ot the research. gray man of S has worked night entourage ot the Pnnce of Wales when he visited here -- in 1934. and day. through the ears.-wi- th out recreation, living near hls"i hre years ago she married Mar--. laboratory,' never 'far from- -" bis shall Field 3d, already quite com, microscope and his slides. Volume. ,.e.e.y Ai.giinzed in c.ton end could be written, end probably Cambridg. theinheritor of JIliO,-wl- ll t be. on hU researches. He nyswW.tM. it would take years fully to InIn New York, comely, rich and eao melUi. with - a Riverside terpret hU findings. It Is doubtful If many whose penthouse where she could drop ia lives hs has saved ever heard of an elevator to her yacht, she pas A him. so carefully qpea he screen pacemaker from the day she ar-himself from the limelight. He has rived- - She Is a leader In enlighten-enlistfor life as an aide to ed chanty and settlement work r, the army of phagocytes which po- out the old lice the bloodstream. And now. In bugaboo atUl baunta her. the wide nezus ot science, courts. She la douotful about what tr with Judges and policemen dressed In underprivileged would do blue rind him an ally in policing model bathrooma If they had them. th social bloodstream. Otherwise she ia happy and sured. Tbe scavepger hunt, which atil! engrosee Mayfair, came from This department has been keepLondon. Along with Schiaparelli, ing a snarp eye for headliners who two or three London coutouriers be- were once college grind. Tha gan to crowd Lanvin and Worth. word was out that they usually faded quickly once out in the English covert cloth began ta bloom world. again around Long Island race to bo toSo far the evidence seems tbe contrary. Maybe it is they were consumed In tha fire tracks and hunt clubs. Tbe social-the- y Just tbe times, but there ar more themselves kindled we must y ,iept wa$ becoming Anglicized more ake aur that a wa reconstruct Phi Beta Kappas movand And, awDv within the last three our life there be no soil in which years, big comes Mrs, Marshall F(P;d ing lnto mundane affairs In m can wayt euch weede grow again." London, and pipes the The, , Is Mlse TerA. Government latest Ruth to Up tunes foe tha routs and the frolics But who ia to say which indus- hereabouts. Her butlers Ion. who dazzled her elders at tho ball, inPresident of trial plants and companies are University of Alabama. Bbo be. Jtlrssage Branded comes refers In tbe workmen's necessary or unnecessary, who is cate the young men In the forest compensation bureau of the New His Revolutionary Tenden- to say what surpluses ot goods are loo large and vv ho la to decide Just camps. It will be money well York state department of labor. what ia speculation? Here Is a spent. Also It Is good to read that After Alabama, she was graduated cies task for the federal government sculptors and artists are to be em- from the Yale law school and. greater than ever undertaken be- ployed by CWA funds to beautify without any fuse about It. quietly WASHINGTON, Jan. 5. Congress went along with the epirit fore In American history. Mr, our public buildings. It would be made herself one of th leaau.g Roosevelt feels it it a fair ex- well to have the sculptors and art-is- American authorities on workof President Roosevelt address, cheering end applauding as if it change to vest such power in the hold classes and teach their mens compensation laws were a speech before S national political convention, but it is government eteelL He says on thia arts to our young citizens. years she was secretary to AlexanWould it not be sensible to taka der D. Noyes, financial editor of doubtful whether many of the members un- point: In the past few months, as workmen the ditches sod tho New York Times. She la wide-derstood the real implications of what the result of our action, wa have de- teach themouttheof arts and tha sciknown and highly esteemed by ot manded citizens maay ence that they rather than have them un- social workers and students of sopresident said. surrender aa certain to licenses do using implements ot the cial problems throughout th counThe brain trust did.-F- or the president' Mthey pleased In their business re- necessarily middle ages? try. She lives in Brooklyn. Copy, document ever lations; but w have asked thia In JACK PLANE. - right tneisaga is the for which tha exchange protection, presented by chief executive to the Ameri- the state can give against exploitacan Congress. Mr. Roosevelt himself conveyed tion by their fellowmcn or by of their fcllowmen. eome idea of the revolutionary character of combinations But even as these words are betbe pronouncement whenJte pointed out that ing spoken, tha administration itis prepared to accede to de7"thq tak confronting th first Congress of self mands from Senator Borah and 1879 was no greater than the one before Con- other that combinations under th NRA b further limited and regress today. and that the old anti-tru-st Mr. Roosevelt's message is couched In the stricted laws be brought back into force. m -- -- ed pre-wa- David Lawrence a Srd-fre- ts a most-radic- ph ra$e-nd-do- W al trines of soda U c Clearly, tha Roosevelt message has never expressed so boldly before, his concept that tbe readjust breathes the spirit of social rev orient going on today is looked upon by him as -- without or tha practical permanent concrete proposals that can make revolution...,. He, refers- - significantly to- - itie- - peaceful" waytbe a' revolution effective. For American people have submitted' to the drastic changes' end such unless the federal constitution Is stre-se- s the absence of disorder. scrapped entirely, the courts ar in a position to prevent the appliFollows Turn eU cation of revolutionary doctrines. The mewug shows that th control over American business But o the subject of the constituwa eaid by the prespresident haa swallowed hook, line from production to distribution tion. nothing brain trust" of course and striker Tbe philosophy ef pro- and consumption. After describing ident. Th to care of that by fillan what take rails Si hopes prointegrated fessor Tugmctt. tbe Leader Of" the ing the vacancies on the supreme brain trust. Indeed It la reported gram, national In -- scope," the court f the Untted State, as they president saps It Is "designed to that the speech wea largely Influ- save with men- who will interpret from occur, destruction and to keep enced bv the aavietant eecretary of for the future th genuinely im the constitution In accordance with haa become the agriculture,-wh- o social and economic phitbsophy moat important man In th govern- portant value created by modern 'h of the Roosevelt revolution. ment, Ills Idea- - dominate the society.' v But what are these values? Mr. (Copyright. 1934). president today. ' as them para- Roosevelt catalogues Ezamlntng th meaiug uselul mechanical Invention, ma-- , graph by paragraph. It wilt be chin production, industrial effi-- , found that th proposals made In Dr. Tngwell'a book on dlacipim In deucy, hiodern means of com-- 1 mnnl cation, education." in the Roose- There Is no broad industry are repeated mention hero of the, velt address. of the Individual nor of Thera la no suggestion for In- rights inherent lu the property stance of temporary machinery or rights up out of thrift and savings, Letters to this colama i of giving bark to business tbs con- built of opportunities of labor to ot bo longer than So words; trol tt once bad of Its own affairs. no aa -, work disagainst Increasing mast bear the name end adOn the contrary. Mr. Roosevelt at placement by machinery. Last dress of tbe writer, although th outset Insists that Uia lines are and not least the president makes will not nei reesrtly be three now between thgae "to being drawn published, and must no bo whom thia recovery raeana a return this meaningful comment: We wonld of a nay and encourage' defamatory or libelous to tho old methods and those to nature. Only excerpts of let- whom the recovery tneans" re the slowly growing impulse among form of many old methods, a per- consumers to enter the industrial "(era over SO words will b printed. Ideas and opinion manent readjustment of our social market place equipped with sufficient organization to insist upon expressed to this eotamn are and economic arrangements" fair prices and honest sales." those ot vontribotom and Opposition Effected . may or may not reflect the Veers To Left This is what the brain trust has views of Tho Deseret News. The foregoing appears coincibeen arguing all along. That the dent a the with announcement of . emergency legtslaUon bnreau of standwasn't temporary at an though it plan to have theteats of all articles of Machine had to be characterized as such to ards here make to of determine thelr Adoption iperehandlse make It leaa subject to attack on durability, conformity with wales Age Methods Advocated constitutional grounds. arguments and advertising. Mr Roosevelta There can be no doubt that the of tha cause of revolution, his willingness td defend his policies on tbe president ta "Veering toward . the Editnrof the:DesretNwi Idea I like to think that the unnecesof government "supervision'' are as a that intended ground they control. Another evi- sary work now being done through permanent readjustment, wnl un- that means Is to be in dence of It a found CtVA funds, such as pick and doubtedly open up tbe opposition which hitherto has been smoulder- later paragraph of his address In shovel labor where machinery he which JANUARY S, IMS. asys: e used to advanmge.-wi- U ot while th For ing. opponents - Member of tb "But the unnecessary expansion never be duplicated. Thatr-l- n futne Roosevelt program want city oommlaalon mad and do not wish a return or industrial plants, tha wastebf ture such work will be don In an Ms nments ior th enaptoc two year. Mayor to broken ethics and. broken char natural resources, tha exploitation manner with what men amuel LV Park wa aaalsned to public aafaty ctrnot rMi twaur- - of the- consumers of natural necessary to work with th maver-tbs protest of Commlaioor Htber if. r render the th accumulation of Blaz- chines, bslux employed on a mathem rights guaranteed Well and W. RlchrI P. .- That is. If the nant surpluses, -- child labor, and chine age basisI tition:--- TV under awitnad ta streets andHpubUc tmprova- - expect a constitutional battle ot'may ma- - the ruthless exploitation ot all la-- work can be accomplished by men menu: Commlaalonar Henry W. Lawranca to Jor proportions when the taeue i.',or- - fhe encouragement of speeu-c- a being employed one hour a week or with other people's money, month aa th case may be, work pubUc affairs sad finance; Commlaalonar Sh sarrried to the polls In November 1934. in an td watarworka and water supply; Commie-aionthem on such n schedule and pay .Tbs Roosevelt address contains them Walls' to parks and public property. proper American standard . a It Insults a man's intelti-gsnmany significant phases that give wag. to work him under bow the key to tho revolutionary philAnnouncement wa made that Senator and arrow era conditions when he osophy which haa been In the Charles ,8. Thomas of Colorado, would address recent event here. Mr. ot belongs ia a highly mechanized tha first mealing of the newly organized BonRoosevelt speaks ot 'reasonable period. neville club. George O. Relf. manager Of the profits" for Industry and predicts It should not bo that bees uas Hoteiutah. wa credited with tbs Idea of orthat the NRA will be a "permanent our big financiers and Industrial-lag- s feature of our modernized indusganizing the club. did not hav sufficient grey trial structure add that It will conmatter between their ears to pertinue under the eupervlslon but not Officer of the grand council of the Native mit labor to have Its purchasing th arbitrary' dictation of governSons of Utah were elected as follow: H. A. power, geared to - th Increased ment itself." production of th machine age. Smith, president; M. S. Erownlng. J. J. Whlta- Values .that the victims should be now Catalogued a ker. Arthur Pratt. Dr. George Thomas. W. B. ' These havebeen penalized with picks and shovels to considmight Wallace, vice presidents; p. E. Connor, eecre- - ered .obtain bread. vague genersiltl-- s had not tary; Dana T. Smith, treasurer; Joseph A the president later In his address It ta gratifying to learn that a . Young, sergeant-at-armand F. Collett, cn-verevealed a hlmeelf complete Portion ef Civilian Conservation to tbs Tug welt doctrine historian, . " J Z f Corpd funds will b used 49 du-- - - ' -- - -- What Readers j - Think , r -- -- -- 1 being-prosecut- ed. printing presses started. . President Roosevelt seems to apply a realistic attitude toward our financial prob- lem, and because of this wilf doubtless dominate the money question during the seveiity-t- h ird session. PREPAY TAXES " " f - per-cen- - i V TWENTY YEARS AGO abnaee-correcte- H8knnn; provision was made by the mcntli beginning this taxes on property within the slate be my paid in amounts ef flOWor morewiltj a dij-- L for advance payments. All sums hand- -' , count pd to county treasurers on account of taxes'-f- or 1934 up and until the last day of January will bring a credit of five per, gent on. the amount so paid. Next month such -amounts as may be paid will, earn a Credit ef four end .n half per cent Payments . during March will receive a credit of four " per eenL Thii continues deereasing until September when the prepayment - of taxes . a diseounLof one . would ear l. - - tt i not only good busine to the per- - ' sal -o- ANTnleiligent - frank-espou- the-con- ed ar -- ... es bach-grou, j a, pu rt 1 Credu Cosu Nothing ot leads!, |