OCR Text |
Show THE HERALD JOURNAL, LOGAN, UTAH. -- he Roosevelt Looks Towards Latin America for Business HERALD-JOURNA- L Published every weekday afternoon by the Cache Valley Newspaper Co, at 75 Weat Center street, Logan, Utah. Telephone 50. Price 5 cents a copy. By mail. In Cacba Valley, year. 52 50 a year; outside Caihe Valley, $5 00 By carrier, 40 cents a month, $3 50 a year. second-class the at matter postofflce as Ffo luira at Entered Logan, Utah, under the act of congress, March Liberty thru 3 1879 all the land." Member United Press, NEA Service, Western The LiberFeatures and The Scrlpps League of Newspapers. ty ItelL MONDAY, JULY 3. 1933. APPROPRIATE CELEBRATION11 INDEPENDENCE DAY NEWTON The Foods and Third Yeui Clothing clubs enjoyed a.i rntei-Leaving eating outing Thursday early m the morning they n.oiore i through the coun'y visiting mont of interest including the Fainti-UnioMilk f it Mule. Borden toryt Igan Ofy FT re department Fonnesbek Knitting Works the Koval Bakery In tne afternoon they proceeded on to Ldy spnnq ,hre they enjoyed a swim, fo! 1 have siasonal tariffs on fruits ami vegetables and quota Tha Ktwisevelt iwmts on other competitive ira-- " Tf administration is caslmK fur iPmfs-Uvno d a lot of toffee, ba- glances tow aid Latin Amei u j. ao, wool, The World Et ononiii Uonfw em e ua,usUnwed from Latin Amenta aypuiontly isn t going to nave thean lowed by a wiener rods! Foutee wo Id fi mu a enod of Honolulu!"1 (tre a possibilities for club members and four leaders p ir That docMit mean vehement of laige rubber produc-tha- t jtuiMfed Leaders are Mis itnb each nation will or tan livr lou m Dtaai! Tuddcnhtn Miss Olive Tuddr ll administration thinks the ham, Mrs Gia e Croui-towithin its own but dels and give1 an Pan Arneric an Comimnul ,iext up ail outside trade the Mrs M ivjb Jorge: sen Instead, be will held at whuh toiiftreine, on internagovernments txperts The tw t!u.)s ive a eti m tiunal ecunomus foresee a world Montevideo probably vome time WedKsdu afternoon at the divided into legroiiai groups bast d J(jr. ls vety lrktly to heome tior end 'Pit s hoolhou-Nciklnie P economic ronfeieme at whiih on trade and oilier arrangements fen nt Foods an! Thui V la s epulis not achieved at London will In any stub s ramble foi e o the topic , di s iss vvei nomte altiam ea Washington will ,K ught fur a more restated Miss Kuth Gotn.'o of turn to the rountnes to t tie south aIea Colorado. was a guest at tile lij.c They will be our best and perhaps! of Mr md Mrs J J Lirscn Un our only bet. Some offlmals point U administration rather past weeK to the agreements readied by the rpliE p,OU4j of the 8,0It an(1 Pnappy umfs of the Kntish Empne at the hara ter of the notes which it Mr a.-Mrs An.os K 'bv inconfer ein e as mdnatmg dresd to terallied at a beaatifiillv an ngei European debtors after dinner the sort of setup whnh may be they neaily all d faulted or made Wednesday evening m honor of he.' brothel and h - bride ffp(tid with South and Central minor pawnents. were Mr and Mrs Ruloa They of Amenta and Moximj framed by Underset retai y of State Claikston Pla.cc wire Thinm.un lii.kici Phillips and Assistant Seiretary and Mrs Adn Arhibald 'OOLIDLK made Latin Ameri Muley, under the direction of Freni Mrs Le'itia Tnompson Mr an VJarw dislike uk bv wine of his dent Roosevelt, Mrs Kenneth Thompson .V- - an Hoover undertook to Mi polities. The idea was to make the replies Mrs John Jarditie Mr a i M . id Mr Glen Thompson mollify them Then, as our trade 'to the defaults and partial Ar.l- those iminti ihs fell off from muits as foreiful as possible and Brigham Guffin Vli M s Hanie Tlunip-j- n .cut $iOSO (KM.UUO in lbj'l to J.'jTJ.Ooo to avoid any extia winds whuh ihald. Misses Idi anil Kale Til imps u. bOO in 19 tj, we sort of forgot about might weaken the Amerban post id M all of Clirkston and Mi a Latin Amena Don by providing what the debtors Haven Benson. Iiui h'Oa'd Iatm America produies raw ma- might consider loopholes. The Miss Coia Rigby anil Mr i.ul Mrs terials and we produce rnanufjt- - State Department policy now is to Amos Rigby tuied goods. There s the basis of lp terse except when we have an Mrs R G Chtistensin id Mm-- 1 tariff agreements no duties on the diRiiment to put up. Minnesota is visping tot raw materials we must have and The department hasnt sent a neapolis, several weeks with het mnllu'i none on the finished products we lu, nod word note now for years Mrs Mary Dowdle ship below the Kio CiramJe. AVe i igl.t, 11 Fun. Mits.,.,..-- , i,. Sidney Alvis spent tile Salt Lake City attending the j convention Harold Christensen of E gun da, California, arrived Fm'iy t md spent the summer with Vlr Mrs J J Larson and lam- - sen a.id Miss Caioliiu Lai cn Mr uui Mis Thom is Green kabucius H '' Nehek- eon- - have An wa icturned from tne cast Orphn meeting er, Mrs Leouw ft Mi- - Noli WITH JIM MARSHALL ducted by the Ladies harm But ea,. v, jiere liss Green has been and the teas The atTuesday afternoon with Mis Noli school at the tetnoon was upenliei' n A Thev n mte'ie Jenkins in charge ding tendingof hei father, M aie T Beck Gieious luncheon yrvcJ "I would be a grand esit" said demonsti ation on diy cleaning was Mr-- , Ruby Tuddcnham was hosthe old astronomer a little long- presented by Mrs An ha Baike tess to the One" and Mrs Camille Wennergren ingly met Wednesday afte'rnoon at" her The Second Year Cbdhin We had been t liking about the 'home The time was spent in sew held club their Wtdiiesdav meeting stars and about little Proxuna afternoon at the home of then mg and solving jig saw purzies A, whu h is the nearest oe them Him dy, folk$ hny fever to Miss Caroline Linen delicious luncheon was "Our nearest neighbor among leader Dro in The word now here (Ka.Hon Dont a hike weie clibcued Mrs Mivis Jorgensen, Mrs Ive i Plans for old stars" man the said the but marry a grave widow. Sarah Andtrsen, Mrs and the remainder of the time was, Bviird, M What it means bic hned to you have never seen it -- and you Winona drowse, Grate Crookston Mr Sirius is the spent l.i sewing hUeI,inesM heavy Article says that 2(XK) elephants piobably . figure Wednesday evening a slumber Benson, NPs Lois Shelton and the closest dossy posing t0 gir were needed last year to make hostess on Muss of the lawn Caroline dul party "But of our nearest five neighstupid, iS0' sleep, lulling; billiard balls Miss June Benson was the week be Larsen was enjoyed by the girL bors Gosh, how did they train the seen among the stars four can " Thursday morning they went on a end guest of Mrs Lawrence Cantonly with telescopes beasts to do such delicate work hike along the Creek ami sj.cnt well in Southfield. The eanx torn the day The following member dvusa o sink, to The club met Fri-- , So we sat there in the sumwere n Meri Chr from home Mis of slow rstensen. or become the at dav preent: avtive, Evelj mer night looking upward where ? VACATION IIINTJS wheeled and Carol Miller, June Garner. Eva Griffin Mrs Howard Gidfin oi the low Gcrstan. tuusken. to the constellations t Goodsell. How to Marine i2h Larsen in Training for a LarAlice II, Christensen a noise Mrs md Jwe slumber fall flamed through the blackness Login Aldus Moser. Alice John on were special guests Others pres-- i r r sen, Trip At Mizar- - the star in the larhting and their C Pronoum ed: leaders, Miss Rose Lar - jent were Mis. Daisy Larsen. Mrs that is lealiy two stars chainBy Prof Amos McDuffy ed together forever whirling 1: YVulk t work every morning around each other endlessly ; with one foot on the curb and the and at the black hole in the other In Milky Way where the black costhe gutmic dust cloud- that may be the ter, This raw stuff ot the stars -- is kept - and as we looked -- a star flamed out for a few minutes and you to then grew dim and disappeared ad j u s t yourself "A star like our own sun"-sa- id to walking on a slanting deck the old man - and maybe in broom closet. curled a up Sleep with a world or many worlds This will train you for sleeping in like ours spinning around it the bunk of the average sailboat. Whit you just saw probably 3: Have your wife strike you over took pla e a thousand years ago the head with a baseball bat sev- though the velestial telegraphy haeral times a day. This will harden juVc brought the fact to your eye your skull so that you will hartily Thu little flash you saw notice when t he Imat jibes and the lasting half a minute mav have boom crashes against your head. been a whole solar system flaming into nothingness USAC scientist says that ants Perhaps wiping out millions vvoik all the time and never play of more or less like ourbeings we don t know about that selves on some world billions of Oh. a we to the go Every time picnic . miles away ants are there, too Some day- - said the old astronofancy our own sun may - O mer-X O explode m the same way UTERVRY NOTE These things happen all the up there The greatest msterv about the time We astronomers call them average myste ry novel is wh any new stars' - because they are orone feMmtld publish it . invisible- - and perhaps And the mooiiI greatest mvster.v dinarily flame out only for a few seconds is why anyone should hu it. or maybe several weeks before die forever Joe Bungstarter thought .ve.de:-- j they Hundieds of new universes hoh-- t a for he was away day going like ours explode every week aad dav. somewhere in the great factory--neBut the judge let him ot t with a ones are building fine. BY RODNEY DITCHER Nrnk-- 'HIToN n Hritr i i WALL STREET ABUSES MUST BE CURBED STREET nobabl. not or was the focus for mote WALL disapprot a! than has been the case this year If left to fritter itself out in sporadic attacks on indivi- i duals, this wave of disapproval will eventually waste itself. If it turns on the Wall Stieet system as a whole, however, it tan he male one of the most useful hits of public sentiment the country ever displayed. And in speaking of the "VV.ill .Stieet system, it is woith while to quote from a recent article in Haipers Matfa.ine deby John T. Flynn, a noted financial writer. Mr. Flynn chiefale stock the nowadays hluntlv exchanges clines that on ly "devices tor cieatinx excessive debts"; and he goes tc) explain just how the job is done. he cites the organization oi the United States Foreign Securities Co., an investment trust oigan-izebv a Wall street banking firm. The concern was capitalized at $30,000,(100. lionds woith Preferred $2,"), 000, (.00 were sold to the general public. stock worth $3,000,000 was issued and sold to the hankers themselves. In addition, 730,000 shares oi common stoi k were issued and assigned to the bankers as a bonus for buying the preferied. Thus the corporation got its $30,000,000. llut that was only half the story. The hankers took their common stock, which had cost them nothing, and had it listed on the exchange. Very soon it was valued at $30 a share. a sample, AS and d ()V much of this common stock issue was sold it is not It is conceivable possible to say," remarks Mr. Flynn. that $30,000,000 worth was sold before the market break, in which case it is clear that this enterprise would draw the public investor, though only actually went into the business. This little anecdote speaks volumes. And no one who is familiar with the Wall Street system will say that it is an isolated or unusual case. It represents a normal way of floating securities and it also, as Mr. Flynn says, represents a sure-fir- e way of creating excessive debts. No one would deny that Wall Street has an important and useful function to perform in the economic life of the country. But it is pretty clear chat some way must be d found of curbing its ing proclivities. $80,000,000 from $30,-000,0- debt-cree- DOESNT SOUND LIKE A VACATION READING in newspapers and viewing in e i v. Litti pay-wit- h , - the movies what DRINKING TIIE ABYSS ONCE MORE SITTING ATOP THE WORLD death. sjcd Just-A-Me- (i-- Maybe its whistling in the daik i whistling ! 1 Hill Billy Programs il Occasionally some town friend asks me, "What do you do to amuse vourself all alone out in the hills?" And I tell him, "Well I have just put in two weeks goof Political ing over The aCritique weird guy named by liconomy Vurl Marx." Then my town friend ,s nrt" his way shaking saying to himself. That was fairly bright 20 years , C" Which, of course, is more 1 could say for my town , ."Vl and fellow need not enjoy delights in the hills; tVtopportunities. wldy day recently a lrVood cutters called on f!ejust ove, abiding in a shack , coip)t,X - sort Js north hump, and the throe."? vquamted. and In another hill aeqainted hit later, anoNcoming arrived, and a on the Paul we stsrrted and there weie mnnn stliff, and vvo. uouis than l w? hes told m 5 heard, even '& gg gpgEg 4 , . Sue nt forwud e has liken another in telephone subscribers and radio listeners are able to get the corby rect tune automatically e The device is controlled by an ingenious clock, which answers the telephone and announces correct tune from the Paris ObWhenever their own servatory itches 'or cloVk'sfail them, dents of the uty merely take down telephone receiver, give the observatory number, and the talking clock automatically speaks the exact hour of the day Although timepieces have been used before to direct amazing machines, this is believed to h the fust instance of a talking resi-leth- dock - will train . .... but at least, its By Hill Billy when shivering abound a wee fire ' in the "jungles Kverv fellow had seen life, all had been rovers; some had Been through wars; some had been hard rock miners: another fellow knew his prospecting, another bis Montana wrangling, and so on, every fellow trying tc. out Us the other, and every fellow ready to call the other if he slipped in any detail, even the name of the tuff dick who used to crawl over the top of passenger trains on the A T. S F and make them either jump off -- to death or shoot them. And when the lying was over, m the shank of the afternoon, we five decided to sing "Sweet Adeline." and the big bald ape he played him the mouth organ, and we had n tenor, ana a high tenor, and a baritone, and I "sang" bass, and the neighbors dog sat him outside and howled, and the black cat came and scratched at the door, and Oan he wbmnted, and we had .wore fun. Some of these davs I just got to string up that old banjo and be ready for Li Gee Gee has a marvelous new lipstick She says one apph cation of it will lost her through two house parties and four mobile rides w . Tlie old man turned again to his and jotted down a few fig- papers ures now i l Ive been doing it for 43 years he -- aid and my conlnbu-ti- o to the woild has been oh a count or two perhaps a little w tndtrmg vomet amid the infinity of glorious woilds up there He laid down his pencil and Sometimes I alsiKbed and said most hope I can live to die in ono great cosmu explosion like those th it happen all the time up there Mavbe AND LISTEN tint WOULD be a grand exit for all of us and what a lesson it would nr to us of our tinv insignificance oidv we could never learn it. Todays Oddity POME tho little fihhor.ii.ui Improve each shinmi; hour? Hell, doth Hr drinks his bait, and Rots homo The isoiids longest poker pame, a session w hu h has been in into, And lies ith all his power: process near Mnrcy, W'u, for 17 sears with one of the players Li Gee Gee vn-- , she who ,ul parti, ipated m the opening jru her rooking recipe' from the ra- game still plajing is being held dio That explains, he anitr' food three times a week. cake she made last mxht It The game started in lkS6, when of .static and nio bi oilier. Matt Marks o Fierro, began playing seven-car- d HOMEK HRRAAs 1)1 m peek, a a:iety of stud poker, as O c pastime for small stakes. Pierce Ip, and to sha.uii; with rnaor-knjfand do admire mv profile a Ihe mirror, and do aske Hanie Brew which of tu features shi doth consider the handsomest, and sho doth replj ; I just lose .sour The Mile is that the game, if ears; the) re o his and floppy. plaj cd at night, must tlose at Why don't you have them pierced SO 3'i oelo.k for quoits? Anil, like a flash of Most of the piavers say that lightning, I do retort, Oh, irat ' their net results alter years of so?" which doth sdrner the pretti. ng makes them about even creature, )ou may be sure! a good game and we It i nave played it so long ue have Rich men pay big pro es foi no desue for anything else," Washington and Lineoln j, said Fierce Marks "J know nothalt not as much as some ioveiorr. ing aoout Dndge, or skat, or iih guys pay for their ov, u P'noihle So far as I'm concerned poker is the great American Service discontinued. . game." I u-te- - i r, i'r UHilllftJm. i JtotetePWwio a step Paris Fiance, where -- whistling. - . Ljip-pe- y, , Anglo-Saxo- j? st: ' U"1 . . . SCIENCE NEWS out-do- HistOrV CAVord AH these have been swell predictions, but unfortunately none of them has come true. Now Mr. Lloyd Guprge is going about England announcBefore the summer is over many ing the world is on the brink of the abyss." The world is of the new college graduates ma so ' near the brink, he adds, that its getting singed, already. be trying make sandwiches out So you see, its a new style abyss. The old abysses were of thei sheepskins cold, dark and sometimes wet. This is a 1933 model, hotcha ABIGAIL AUULEAU i E and how! Central heating and no chilblains. tTh crowd will Ah, well, the world has been oil the brink of abysses for if you centuries heck! for millenniums. Not a decade has passed sympathize fall down his without its Jeremiah, chanting it hut song of doom. But the woild persistently refuses to let its foot slip. It will walk all over if you just lie skirts along the edge, chucks in its old razor blades, sticks you there an grunt. its gum on the brink and goes along about its business, . s e . David Lloyd George, the British SOME years ago, was going to hang the kaiser. He announced this vociferously. Then he was going to create a world fit for. heroes to line in. This was to happen right after the world war. Almost every year, since then, Mr. Llovd George ha announced something in strident tones wars, peaces, panics, good times, unusual weather and battle, murder and sudden .1 wk j . President Roosevelts vacation makes you sympathize with the man. Even the humbliest private citizen, with the urge to get away from it all, would seem, to have a better oppoitumty for enjoying hiimelf. Just how much rest there can be for the president, in touch with the work! at minute, the target for a million cameras, the cynois sureevery of a million eyes we dont know. But it certainly isnt our idea of a vacation. Mr. Roosevelt, they say, doesnt mind it. He has been living in a glass house for so long that real privacy would be a novelty. Of ci)u;De, presidents really have no vacations. They make a gesture, just to conform to the popular belief that everyone ought to have a change of scene once a year. Fut their minds seldom stray very far from their job and so they get very little mental relaxation. Well, youre luckier, than the president. You can go to the hills or the beach or the prairies or another city, and utterly forget work. If you can, you should. It is good for the mind to see new things, think new thoughts, receive new ideas and just idle along in low gear for awhile. , I -- - mm wm |