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Show P TIIK PAUL TKN. The H c r a d - J o u r n a 1 A n-- 11 1 rnr v n i i K K A 1, ) - J U U at m K N A L, CTT l7TA LOGAN, Tlerald-Jonm- al Those who are governed least are governed best. THOMAS JKFFKliSON. fcirnt of THE MIGRANT The Okies are not just people who live in a book that makes people shudder. Nor is (heirs a problem confined to California. Today every community has them. Florida is becoming acutely aware of a tyj of gypsy farmer who comes in every winter to pluck what he can of the lucrative fruit trade and leaves in the spring. In Cleveland, it war, recently reported that 2000 migrants are being maintained on the relief rolls, while hundreds of others are being sent back to their homes as rapidly as that can be done. New York state has been forced to exile thousands of such families in recent years to prevent its slum conditions from becoming more acute. Unless something is done, the migrant farmer, against his owm wishes, will pull down the general standard of living. The time has come when a congressional investigation such as that suggested by Representative John II. Tolan (Dem., Calif.), may do a lot of good. COPB The present attack is not directed solely against union men. Contractors and building supply men are also being made targets. The announced purjiose of the entire probe is to clean out the industry, which means that the broom will be applied w'herever there is dirt. What Mr. Arnold hopes to accomplish, and what has already been done in some places, is to reduce building costs. When the excess prices are trimmed off, more people will build homes and more union men will get jobs. It is not an invasion of democratic rights to indict and If building punish men guilty of fradulent practices. prices are too high because some contractors and some union men are entering into collusion, prospective homebuilders and union craftsmen, who are directly affected, have a right to know about it. i ... i Answer to Previous Fuzzle 6 R.su) I iQTI shrilly. 12 Home. 14 Christmas 26 To throw. 27 Musical note. 28 Toward. 29 Row of carol. 16 Ancient. 17 Health spring. 18 Some person. 20 Gold quartz. 21 Month. 22 Drinking mug 23 Arid. M 25 No good. 48 26 Tailed 17 Quantity. 19 Eagle' 22 To arrive. 24 To bark a series. 31 ACN E T! 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PAT Fight Over Labor Tics Up Passage of Railroad Bill 15V st rpi- Y WCA ( WASHINGTON, March 1 MA KCll HR IIHIl, Pallet' the railroads want'so badly. A Senate - House committee is wilding together the Senate's Wheeler bill and the Houses Lea lull. Basically they are much the same; what the railroads like is that they put water earners under the Interstate Commerce Commission. Big difference is what they suy about mergers. Tim heeler hill simply says that la mergers there must lie a fair ami eipiitahle arrange--n cut for labor, the I. O. C. to Is, the judge; the Lea bill ilatl.v forbids any merger that Mould or rut nil i ice employment Mnrkers' pay. The railroads naturally want the former clause. It has been okeyed by all the railroad brotherhoods except the Trainmens. The latter found .an ally in. Congressman Harrington of Iowa, who got the clause they like into the Lea bill and is now keeping it there by a novel parliament try maneuver. soliloquy of King Gustav: Ay tank ay STAY home. rnovii or rather horsesteps, t lie idea a good one. hoping Jimmy h n i c ke will reach some kind of pei k. e a of EMHROnVmKNT in Lama OLIVER GOLDSMITH the Louisiana election when he wrote:, "fu uvnts hut h!th here bcltiu)u Nor i ants that little lumj." plea for help against the of l.rown liears on an Alaska Island will ha carefully considered by the various governments along with Finnish appeals for protection against the lied ones. THE war ftfTUlE Tories of today, JL said deWood ring, Secretary nounce Franklin Roosevelt as tlie Tories of 177U denounced But he Gcorgo Washington. should also have stated they didn't have to denounce him for not saying whether hed take a third term. The secretary lias mixed his chronology. Is 44TVHE TOBACCO ROAD J-getting rough again for Britain, despite the Turkish hi end. TT appears that Earl Biowder vo-I was his own fellow traveler. It says Congressman Smith. (I nt give ialxir enough The May the A. F. of L wrote it, it Mould he IumIiiI tor an employer to talk with his Markers about unionization provided the talk wasn't aeeotn-pnne- d by an act of discrimina- st are smart tj re-- -l flViE Frc-.e- h criit dogs fur aitivo wsr drive a horse through that. Whv, under it. an employer could call in a w inker 'Bill Jones. ami youve s.iy, worked for me 2n ye. us; hut you oiil if you join the union III fire you' and the law So couldn't have touched him after the winds, m t of disirimina-tinn- ,' we added, 'or int imol it ion yt KHAN Idl I, Ns IVIO TKOI Id. I. Hot ii Puerto Kuan interests here "A could ion'.'" M iv lie. If Writ b'.vey create (.--n '.i ll h ht o.ittli rzi you've evr rnc of them g foot'oaii field iut on t.rd'iriahd how effective of tiicn could be on a field. 'ME New Dealers declare Q' Mr. (Jsrr.cc tsr. t really an Jolm L. Lewis ev.l old man." churned .'J"'s only ntedi-.va- d l. PI EIITO 111 d s,-- Inini-lollo- is I y he muddied Brilain is scouting THRU than SPu.tiuO German heavy labor woikers are given a quart of Russian tea a lay, thus taking sabotage by the swallow. Le-o- ig l and the Wage and Hour Division hope that C'nngiess will decide soon to do Mum tiling about modifylaw .us it at teils ing tlie wage-hou- r Puerto ltleo Init the 'I lluiisc lias Scuate-passeKing lull, under commitwhich shs ial industry ters Mould lie t up to I mil out nhat Puerto Kictiu wage ought to lie, Tlie hill is okay by tlie Mage and Hour IMsiple, lint every time an effort is made to pass it, it gels t.igged I, road with ameiiduu'iits exempting log labor groups on the in. tin lain!, which tlie Wage and Hour folks won't stand for. Result, so far, is no action at all. Mi towhile the situation on the r I. uni is had Aside from sugar, the big indusiiy is needlewoi k, with 90 o', wuikcrx gelling about to ei an hum. 'I lie jump to lie level of ilu icnts ju ,1 isn't mg made, and tlie Wage and. Hour Division isn't ptosceiit-tng- , realizing the jump is too leg and figuiing the law will pie"nt-l- Alabama quad brother of rpiIE J. Faith, lkt'0 and Charity has he, n (hu. Fifi'ikhn," and vvg sa.l p.avo to wait a lerg ti.oc ti km. v whether lie v. us name I alter the raver or the p. mier. broadcast to rpHt: Pi.,'kt lYi'ts t t if they did 1 n the i , I r lh Germans would i .me, ho me people will remember l.ow they were raulior.ed 'u t.t lili.n that the lag would tneni if they misbehaved. Low we have the hear himself against a h. i,i t. ui la-a-r g-- to rides The horse Franklin school is no average plug. When the college started its annual horse show his mount took first d novice place in the class. Fanklin . wasnt quite big to horse the enough guide through its paces and his father rode the steed to the title. The Wests are a riding family. five-gaite- most everyday. One thing that keeps him out of the saddle is rain and Franklin freely admits that it gets plenty wet on rainy mornings and I dont ride." But rainy days are few in Cache Valley and F'ranklin estimates that he only loses seven or eight days a year because of rainy weather. can be won. I5y DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-No- Franklin has a younger sister that rides and both his parents are ardent horse fans. The family stable boasts two horses. Franklin pilots his steed up the college hill everyday that is al- allies have a ALT1IO the camel army in the near east, there are a lot of other humps to get over before the The Washington w that panic-stricke- n ;untuid 1iir-op- or. Russia. If Florida swimmois stumble over .slum tiling, they needn t be t no it will frightened piobihly lie nothing more thin a si til tied 'Nazi boat. 100,000 POPULATION, IN 1930; NORTH DAKOTA HAD ONLY 52- AVERAGE FOFL THE U.C. IS 72.. 2 I ub-- L -- AIJJF.D HELP DELAYED Dniadier proposed that Britain and undertake an expeditionary force through Sweden to Finland Immediately. He said that French troops were ready, but no expeditionary force could move without the British fleet. Neville Chamberlain said he would take the matter under ade NGVADV ACCIDENTS PBR and Russians and Admiral Bv rd in the Antarctic the figurative ends of the eaith" are i ihl ri nhtn i. tim gits pay tor nitgazuie ltd on their (times. war last November. Here is the history, chapter by chapter: Chapter 1. Finland was dickering with Russia for a settlement without war. While Finnish envoys were in Moscow, the British press urged an unyielding front against Russia, British diplomats patted Finland on the back, gave her every encouragement to .resist Stalins demand for territory and naval bases. Chapter 2. The war started. Finland appealed to Britain for Lord Halifax explained planes. that Great Britain could not afford to risk offending a friendly country Russia. Chapter 8. As Finland stood her ground, and as the war dragged past Christmas, the British and FYench began sending planes surreptitiously into F'inland. But there was no open support. Chapter 4. On February 7 Premier Dnladicr and Prime Minister Chamberlain met in Paris. By that time confidential military reports from Finland indicated clearly that the Finns could not last much longer. More than equipment, they needed replacements. Their Ynen were worn out. . Finns Unil thethe Antic A READER suggests that hid-- J x rnpt rs he given some cn-dl-t on their sonttme when tha vic- ALIJCN S. THIS CURIOUS WORLD greater papas. ind ROBERT t 'HARTER BY ( IIAITER visement. To get the complete picture of Congressmen are trying to keep Chapter 5. On February 8 the British econone must go Swedes, down taxes not so much for muddling, long worried over the back of F'inm.sh to start the the omy as for encroachment of Russia, informed the F'rench and British that they would cooperate with an Allied expeditionary force. The Swedes went even further, said that since By William it would take some days for the Ferguson l, British and French to reach they, the Swedes, would send troops immediately if msmiicI that later the British and F'rem h would bm k them up. Tics Chamberlain also took under advisement. toe Chanter 6. By Finn were giving ground steadily renewed Russian before But Chamberlain still was advising with his cabinet. also. Hie GerBy mans had heard of the Allied plan for an exueditamary force through the Scandinavian countries, and bint warned Sweden ngninst it This put the Swedes in a tuiigh spot . However, Sweden still stood by her position. She informed the Allies that if they would send a expeditionary force, Sweden would permit its passage across her territory and cooperate fiillv. But if the Allies only sent driblets of volunteers, then Sweden could not cooperate. F'or tins would only mean risking German HAD FATAL. disoleasuro wit limit Allied fpiiil l.i, Intito Gone trying In linn out what odds she ran get if Bile declares war ar- tillery fire has departed from the battle field of F'mland, the Allies are gelling an almost picture of what that defeat means to them. For when the history of this world war is written, probaly the of F'mland can be placed beside the British sabotage of the Spanish Kepulic as the wars two major catastrophes. The surrender of Finland means not so much a triumph for Soviet Russia as for Germany. It means that the remainder of Finland now will be welded together for self protection in an economic alliance with SM'eden and Norway. And most important of all it meanrf that all Scandinavia will come under the direct domination. if not the control of Germany. In fact, Nazi Germany is working overtime right now, and has been for the past two weeks, to create a sort of United States of North Europe Norway, Sweden, Finland and Denmark, all cooperin closest the manner ating and perhaps polieconomically, the with reich. That is tically, Dr. Schacht, why Germany's economic genius, arrived in Stockholm exactly one day after Finnish peace was signed. This means that another vital area of Europe becomes alienated from tlie British, just as the downfall of the Spanish Republic meant that British influence vanished from one vital area of the Earmarking of convention deleIts gates has officially begun. going to be tough from now on for citizens to keep their ears pinned to the ground while they're trying to keep their eyes on Europe. Mediterranean. t nuiy mil nil I.Iovd p.u Impale in the i' oi Hi,' war to .see If he (' ii i. iku good on tlie advue hs his bun giving in the i,ew. d Merry-Go-Roun- and thinks When asked why he didn't walk to tlie nearest bus line and ride to sehiHil F'ranklin replied, It only takes me 25 minutes to saddle the horse and get to school every morning, and I can sit down while I ride. Tlie bus takes just as long and is usually crowded so that 1 would have to stand up. Ill take the horse anyday. Tibet may suggest to Thomas E. Dewey that lie started his own race for office a hit too lntc. COMMITTEE PLUGS LOOPHOLE IN DRAFT When the Smith committee was drafting its bill to change the Wagner act and the labor board, lots of model amendments covering different points were submitted by organizations anxious to have the law modified. The committee threw out all samples and used its own language except in the case of the "free speech amendment, where it used the one the A. F. of L. had handed in. It Mas too drastic even for us old conservatives, though, ami mp had to tone it doMn, corn a an Harrington circulated a petition m Bermuda thought its onions. HERE'S that the committee demanding keep his clause in the bill and got 275 congressmen to sign it. You mb AND students now atthe Utah State Agri 3.000 F'ranklin' practice isnt without precedent because his father. Dr. Franklin L. West, commissioner of education for the L. D. S. church, did the same thing when he attended the Utah State Agricultural college. Frank is following in his father's footsteps, rpiIE J- recreation. rules a cultural college he horse! Living 23 blocks away from the campus F'ranklin doesn't live on a bus line. Whats more, he doesn't have a personal car and abhors walking. The only .solution left was to rule his father's horse to school every morning and he has been doing just that for the piust two years. A fi. the tending Washington 'iirrcspnmlnil fight over how much protcrlnm lulior ought Id get when railroads me merged is the chief th'iig dela.v ing tile (minibus translull tile log reform portation tion. of BliUUE PATTON llcruld-loiiriin- l William Green, president of the A. F. of L., and his associates are passing up one of the best chances they ever had to enlist sympathy for their cause. Instead of conceding that abuses do exist in the building trades unions and offering to help the governments anti-trustaff to clean up the rackets, Green has decided to fight Thurman Arnold, assistant U. S. district attorney and instigator of the nation-wid- e investigation into building trade irregularities. Its not altogether satisfactory to have someone else point out the rubbish in your own backyard; but, if thats what has happened, the most graceful thing to do is to concede that it is there and to offer to remove it. The racketeering and dishonesty that has crept into the A. F. of L. was inevitable and is not the fault of the millions of honest men and women and the dozens of honest labor leaders in the organization. The refusal of the leadership to assist in getting rid of the .rubbish, however, necessarily reflects unfavorably upon the rank and file. M 14Q Smart? Ill say lies smart! He wrote Doris a love letter in Latin anl she cant even translate ill GREEN MISSES A BET Irish holy man pictured here. 11 Insinuation, IT To the newspaper desk the other day came a college news bureau release. It was sent also to other state papers, and it tells a feature story in such an interesting form that we present it here. It's written about Young his Frank, and how he rides horse to college almost every day. Here it is: Most college students have this problem of getting to school pretty well solved - but always along mechanical lines. If they are fortunate enough to have a car they drive to and from academic halls; if they live on a bus line and have the price of the fare they ride the bus; some even a bicycle; pump others have to walk, but don't West like it. Franklin of Logan has solved his getting-to-schodifferent than ly any problem PROBLEM GROWS HORIZONTAL k see Dr. The power to tax is the jower to destroy. 1,5 V" U Bi Almost any weekend you might and Mrs. Frank L. West the riding their horses along Boulevard, along West Field lanes, or near the east foothills. Or if it isn't Dr. and Mrs. West, it might be Dr. West and one of1 his daughters, or l'oung Franklin. It's a tradition with the West family to ride horses. They maintain that horseback riding is a wholesome and highly enjoyable In - a, SATIIRDAV, The Riding Wests a III HOLY MAN y l'i SIDEGLANCES not assume flnanelal responsibility for any advertisements published In Its columns. In those Instances ivbere the puper Is at fault. It will reprint Oiat part of tlm advertisement In which the typographical misluku occur. Tim U SPRING OFFENSIVE ON THE HOME FRONT Published every week day afternoon by the Cache Valley Newspaper Co., 75 West Center Street, Logan, Utah. Telephone all departments 60. Tlie Herald Journal delivered by carrier 45 cents per month. By mail. In Cache Valley, $100 per year, $2 25 tor sixth months, $1.25 for three months, 50 cunts one month; elsewhere $5.00 per year. matter In the post office at Entered as second-clas- s Utah, under the act of congress, March 4, 1S79. Proclaim IJberty through all the land Liberty Bell. error which may appear I ! II, Name three othcr. PLANT ROOT FORAAS SUCH AS ANSWER: COP IMOBYN&rHVI(, Bulbs, coims and lhizomt INC. STILL UNDER Al) 1SEMENT Meanwhile the French prepared to send troops. The Britisli also placed their north Scottish embarkation ports under a shroud of secrecy, as if they also were preparing to send troops. But Chamberlain happened. nothng had the matter under adv iscin-'nt- . Chapter 7. Almost one month Int ir, March in, Fln'and, exhausted Milt peace epvovs to Moscow. Next day Prime Minister Chamberlain appeared in the house of dinmi'ins to announce that F'rance .Hid (treat Britain would "proceed imroeibnielv ami iointly to helo Finland" wilti nil (h avai'able at their disposal" if eeinnrees I'Viland asked for help. wold was pass- Simultaneously, ed out from Allied sources that Finland was talking with Moscow merely to make the British realize the giavity of the situation, and bring help from them. In going to Moscow, London whispered, the F'inns were bluffing. Chapter 8 Next day the Finns signed a peace treaty. They were not bluffing. They were all in. (Note Most interested observer of the above history is report- to ed be King Carol of Rumania, next victim of the squeeze.) Russo-Germa- n FOOD LABELING be difficult to sell pudding powder to a housewife at 75 cents a pound if she knows it it nothing but colored corn starch. This is what lies behind the current struggle between the food industry and the Pure Food and Drug Administration. If the latter wins, the industry will have to put new labels on its ptoduen It might beginning July 1. Pudding powders, fancy flours, chocolate drinks and an array of other packaged foods might lose some of their salad dressings, attractiveness if a label stated their simple ingredients. Yet the Food, Drugs, and Cosmetics Act carries such a requirement. The fight is over amendments to the act which would delay the PFDA new label requirement. wants no delay. Backed by the American Home Economies Association, they make the point that untrained housewives in the poorer classes are often lured by proprietary foods" which are actually very expensive. There is no question of wholesomeness, but there is a big question of price. (Copyright, 1940, by United F'eature Syndicate, Ine ) Natural History Expedition Slated Probable (late rf the eighth mil ural history expedition sponsored by the botiiny, geology, zoology and range management of Hie Utah State depart men! Agricultural college is April and 28 Inclusive, Dr. J. Stewart W I a 111 s, geology depart head announced Thursday. bership of stmlejit.x in the turn will be received moot Met- - Mwll- - until Mnrdt 22. For Hie past seven years thf four depart mi nt.s have jointly whuh sponsored II, e expeditions have been to southern Utah l adjacent stales to Daily the floriK& fauna and get, logical features various nrias and districts. Tit trips have averaged over a thousand rules i.i length usually over a period of nine davs. this Student making the trip year are loosideimg four possihk il ineraries. One plan is to uuike temporary headquarters at Blanie ing,' Utah, from where they would visit the natural bridges in Sa Juan country. Mexican Hat the Mesa Verde National park wu is Colorado, while a seeond across reach Blanding, then travel the Navajo area to tlie south ri of Grand canyon and return W way of Bryce and Zion canyons-Thother two possibilities that the party may go to Zt ami Bryce canyons and the most Wonderlands, spending time m Wayne county, 9 else cross into Arizona after vd" to tM iting Zion canyon ami hiketbrougu bottom of Grand canyon Toroweap valley. of the trip ate D Williams and Dr. Bassett ot u01 gutre, assistant professor the |