OCR Text |
Show f r R D THE PAGE TWO. ' The t be be A 25 I Herald-Journ- HERALD-JOURNA- L, WEDNESDAY. MAY 4. 1 932. How Uncle Sam Dropped Two Hundred Million al Dollars Playing the Grain and Cotton Markets Newspaper Scripps-Canfiel- d LOGAN. UTAH. Afternoon Every Week-da- y Published at 75 West Center street, Logan, Utah, by Cache Valley Newspaper matter at the postoffice, Logan, Utah, under the act Co. Entered as second-clas- s of March 3, 1879. Subscription price in Cache Valley by mail, 52.50 the year In advance, by carrier $3 50 a year in advance or 40c the month. OuUiue Cache Cl u ty wl P of $a Valley, by mad $5.00 the year. Gilman, Nicoll A Ruthrr.an, Special Representatives ket St.; Chicago, 400 N. Michigan Ave.; New York, Tremont St.; Detroit, 601 New Center Bldg. 10 M fn sc THE TRUTH C Proclaim Liberty Sun Francisco, 525 Mar19 W. 44th St.; Boston, 18 throughout the land" QUICK Ncitner this newspaper, nor any of its stockholders or officials has any connection whatever, directly or indirectly, with any political party, public utility, real estate promotion or other privnlo business except the publication of newspapers devoted solely to disinterested public service. an of cu HE DIDNT HAVE THE COURAGE or tb (8 J ' of Munior J Howdy, lolaf .The picnic season will IS here shortly. to save up Now U the pafwr pto your old tin feh plate and rikpty pickle botU .s a Bigger tles. Left make and Dirtier Tear at picnic grounds. Summer Neckwear Week opens hext Sunday. Joe Bungstarter Is going to observe it by erasing all fingermarks from his celluloid collar. ! D THE FIRST READER . - ' rong. Gov. Janies Rolph, Jr., who did not have the courage to act as his own conscience must have dictated who surrounded himself with legal quibbles and stilled ed WHY $200,-000,0- 1 Some Things Happen com-pan-- y, sold eom-pan-- raa-ea- l? 1 J i j I 1 ! North Logan one the multitudes in the spectaeul crowd scenes. This great picture which will live through the ages ,i the most remarkable achievemen of silent films, was filmed b I red Niblo in Italy and Amerii at a cost of four million dollai which is easily evident from back glimpse of its gigantic grounds and spectacular epi such as the thrilling sea b Jt and the magnificent chariot rac by which Ramon Novarro in th title role avenges his Roman an tagonist, Messala, who has bee the cause of the ruin of himsel and his kinsfolk. Sound effects bring a fresh a pect to this magnificent pictui giving its spectacle tremendou realism. For now you not onl see the charioteers tearing aroun the course chtered on by the free zied spectators, but you hear thci as well. The sound effects in th thrilling sea combat episodes ai likewise effective. Ntril Bll Yfc LISTED 50 2 COWS BROOKFIELD. N. H. (L'Pi Th cows hei tax report listed 50 recently, as the property of Ott Hanson, World war veteran, wli owned o cow with bis broth, was exempt from taxation. immortal music. The festival was directed by Miss Oreta Hall and Miss June VVhite, and was sponsored by the Dance club. A garden setting was provided for tne dress revue, which first showed dresses suitable for every The models for these occasion. dresses were Dixie Johnson, Elinor Hodgson, Marjorie Mathews, Harriet Anderson, Iris Swapp, Evelyn Carlisle, Fannie Hodges, n Marianna Parkinson, Eloise and Marion Peterson. Groups of. morning, sport and street afternoon and evening dresses were then modeled by the girls who had made them. A Chinese dance by Margaret Morgan were features of entertainmen and Margaret Cardon, and a tap About forty guests were presen dance by Fannie Hodges interThe eighth grade graduatm spersed these groups. Piano and exercises were held in the wai violin music was played through- chapel On Sunday evening. A ver out by Oralie and Gladys Bailey. interesting program was presents v Principal C. I. Stoddard of tli North Cache high school presentc the diplomas to twenty five gra'i uates. A large crowd attended. Mr and Mrs. Harold Kirby an son were visiting over th Mr. and Mrs. Fred Duce were small week-enparty Mrs. d John as guests of Mr. an guests of honor at a Kirby. at their home on Wednesday evening, when a group of friends called, observing the birthday anniversary of Mrs. Duce. A lovely chicken supper was served, after which games and music were features of entertainment. Covers were laid for Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Waite, Mr. and Mrs. Jed Seamons, Mr. and Mrs. R. S. McQuarrie, Mr. and Mrs. George D. Seamons, Mr. and Mrs Riley Harris. Mr. tyid Mrs. Lael Peterson, Mr. and Mrs. Jed Seamons, Mr and Mrs. Asa Seamons, Arthur Peterson, Mrs. Betty Mickelson, Mrs. Sadie Haneey, Mr. and Mrs. Alma Balls and the guests of honor. First in th dough. Thn in Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Seamons of Soda Springs, Idaho, spent (tie oven. You can be lure Saturday here, guests of Mr. and of perfect belting' in using Mrs. J. E Seamons. They returned home in the evening. President W. M. Everton of the Cache stake presidency was a visitor at Sunday school Sunday morning. He spoke on "Tithing. Mrs. Retta Perkes was guest of honor at a family party held at her home Wednesday evening, the occasion being her birthday A social evening anniversary. was spent. Refreshments were served. Wednesday evening, the students 25 ounces for 25c of the seventh grade entertained the eighth grade graduates at a MILLIONS OF FOUNDSIUSIO social. BAY pun.COVERNMrNT A program, games refreshments 2 How the price of cotton has fallen, despite the $300,1 MHI.IHMI Federal Farm Boards uctivity since its formation in 1929, is shown i n the above chart, prepared from data compiled by the U. S. Department of Commerce and covering cotton prices from 1910 to the present. For purposes of comreferences to court decisions to justify a decision every parison, a price of 12.4 cents a pound is rated at 100 per cent. Californian knows was made months ago EDITORS NOTE: This is the groups of associations Street eon-p..n--did in the back offices of Sail Francisco corporations. second of three stories on the Fedin commodities. specific dealing How i eral Farm Board, IncJe Sams the man make which Those best known are the Far$500,MHMMW organization Tom Mooney 'sits behind the gray walls of Sail his moa-e- y ? He to halt falling farm mers' National Grain corporation was designed and the American Cotton made his mon-e- y Quentin with a clear conscience. prices. Its expenditure of association. by u r g a g the wheat to in peg Governor trying Genial, smilihg, expansive Rolph, Sunny to buy control exercised along public cotton prices is soon to be and Through will look never blue at the Jim, again stock in the sky of Caliioi nia a senate commit- with the granting of loans, the investigated by and the sun on the hills with an unclouded brow. Sunwhile he have come to be retee. American investors recently lost garded as Farm Board subsidiar- about $250,000,000 in default of the ny Jim is human. He is a friendly man. He knows In his owa stock ies. Although the stabilization Kreuger (match king) bonds. And BY RODNEY DITCHER right from wrong. I tiie corporations represented purely a heres why: He Service is KEA knows this Writer what will of him Oh, Farm Board venture, they were hot this man a great posterity say The issue floated in the United is a great as he lies awaiting oblivion beside those other puppets not by Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc. placed in charge of the two co- States was my, no! He secured, WASHINGTON The Federal operatives. who traded their way into the friendly shade of Sacraproperty, but by other bonds. a declares The radio, military Farm Board, if you judge it by F. F. Creekmore, vice president But the joker in the contract mentos eapitol dome; what has happened to the farmer and general manager of the A. C. was this: There was a clause alXpert, will play an important part HE DIDNT HAVE THE COURAGE! in the next war. in the nearly three years Since C. A., receives $75,000 a year. He lowing the Kreuger interests to it was appointed to effect his re- will also receive plenty of at- substitute for the good bonds Dont pity Tom Mooney. Pity Jim Rolph. And Jura out the guard, here comes General Andrew H. Brown! lief, has been a frightful failure. tention from the investigating sen- listed as collateral other bonds pity the people of the great state of California who have He admitted, Otherwise, it would not be in ators. when ex- of equal PAR value. hurled Stephens, Richardson and Young into the politiSo what the Kreuger crowd did for such intense scrutiny from amined by the agriculture comcal dump heap only to find that their champion is made TODAY'S DEFINITION j congress as it will receive during mittee last November, that the was to take these good bonds r Financial j A time crisis: the investigation by the Senate average cotton farmer's income and sell them, and then substiof the same clay. j when all the workingman's worthless tute almost was about $300 a year. foreign Agricultural committee. And those men San in Francisco who pity great to used relieve Battered by a 50 per cent demoney 'must be Creekmore was formerly a cot-.- .. issues which had a PAR value of have the minds of their political servants, at( the the embarrassment cline in farm prices since 1920, ton merchant at Fort Smith, Ark $100, but an intrinsic value of poisoned Wall street stock gambler. to suppress the confessions of Moonevs perby huge surpluses in the tempted jjlg associates sav he used to only a few dollars. fr continued The result is that the Ameridepression make as much as $75,000 a year in crops, by turned accusers, deaf ears to jured the pleadings of with its effect of lower consump- - the cotton business. Farm Board can bonds are now secured by the duped judge and jury that convicted Mooney. tion. by rural bank failures and members have insisted that the very doubtful foreign issues. Trying to warn people of the dangers of moonshine Is like stickPity them, not Mooney. drought and other adversities for saiary was not exorbitant because which the Farm Boaro can hardly it was essential to obtain the ing up a sign, Wet Paint." And pray for the day of awakening when the name be blamed, the American farmer services of a master hand for Everybody's got to test it for will a blush Mooney of shame to the cheek of bring is today far worse off than before such a vitally important position. themselves. he ever heard of the agricultural every Californian, even as the name Creyfuss brings The cotton payABIGAIL APPLESAUCE SEZ: The M. I. A. held their closing confusion to every Frenchman. marketing act which was hailed roll runs about $1,000,000 a year his salvation. of tne means as H. G. Safford, vice president and program and annual ball Thurs They had to about fell from irtome Farm sales manager, makes $35,000 a day evening, which marked the give Aunt Lrtty billion dollars in 1929 to year. II e ckle berry closing features of the season's that is what they receive non- albeit If I did follow the course twelve in dollars about aeven billion work. Confections were served. ether take for S. manMilnor, George general support. in a say I doubt not 1 1931. Farm prices stand at about A good attendance made the afoeraUon. reager of the grain would land two miles inland on i level. the pre-wIV first was ceives $50,000 a vear He used to fair a social success. A Kentucky youth has Invented Saltspring A Island, on top of a for th operacomsupper was enjoyad,1 be associated with a radio set that will eliminate mountain! 'And so to homo. the Farm Board pany in Alton, III Themilling cor- Saturday evening at the home of Meanwhile, tion and th grain of Uncle static. But what this country has drawn $500,000,000 second was to poration has 947 employes. Vice Mr. and Mrs. Bert Burrell, the lecds is a set that will eliminate improve market- President and General Manager occasion being the birthday anstop her from George Washington has his lace Sams money to stimulate aid and conditions, odding cowboy singers. J. M Chilton gets $32,500 a year niversaries of Mrs. Burrell and on many denominations of tills. ing talkin alout it A beautiful and, when the big pod Treasurer W. I. Beam Mrs. F. E. Nelson. Lil Gee Gee says she woulf be YE PIARY more than satisfied if rhe could breaks in wheat and cotton came, birthday cake with candles formMany men who say they became to. plunge into the market through ed the centerpiece for the table. rich through hard work neglect to With a business of get her hands on a few. magnithe Grain Stabilization corpora- tude a salary of that that Music and games were the evet p betimes, and to the prlntery, merely is n kind t say whose hard work. cortion and Cotton Stabilization entertainment. Eighteen where there be grrate mess of out of line with industrial opera- ning's And now for a jolly .Id hold to in an effort worke, but did nnught of it, such tions," says Chairman James C. guests were present. romn with the gold- poration Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Nyman, up the price. a sluggard 1 be, albeit did study fish! Stone of thp Farm Boatd with refPARTING SHOTS , The general results are Mr. and Mrs W. E e Nyman, erence to Milnor. the If fish is good brain-foomap hanging above board The bought Mr. Mrs G A Nyman and One criticism you ought to eat a couple of my deske, it being a chart of some of the Farm Mr and RED CKOs it . when of bushels wheat and, B. A and Mrs Nyman atfried whales! I! lazy Northern Isles through which CLANTON, Ala.. May L (I l: it made its figures public last Board is based on the fact that tended the fifteenth wedding anI did once sayle, on a glorious An under man Chau Alexander Legge negro couple whose home fall, still held 190, 000, IKK) bushels. of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver niversary summer month; and 1 did trace a and aged it offered first t the weri-kuin the managership It paid an average of 82 cents of the Thursday-eveninAddled Axiom: Rolling bones course on the chart from Limekiln recentbelongings and the Grain G Johnson at Logan turnr ices, ex- a bushel Alabama Wheat lately has been Stabilization to gather no moss unless they roll 1oint on Haro Strait to Montague pressed their gratitude to the Red selling below 60 cents Corporation Miss Marietta and Virgil Ny Harbor on Guliano Island, through Cross for building them a new seven, James H Murray, president of man On th fust of last Novementertained Friday evening Swanson Channel end across li home and furnishing it, by mak- ber the hoard estimated a paper the Chicago Board of Trade. at a hou-.party. Some women sue for divorce on lassage, laying out a roni-pa- ing a will bequeathing their farm loss" of $tn. oiki.ixiO Cone less has music games and Following the grounds of TOMORROW: What friends of And course with greate accuracy. to the Red Cross at their death. since voted in.iKKI.fKKl bushels of luncheon as served to lfi guests. the wheat for unemployed relief thi' Fanil Board say it has dour Mr and Mrs. Hyrum Fergus and a few million bu'hcls have for the farmer in preventing pri- - and family have moved into Lo-By been sold. ces from going still lower. gan to make their home. Carrying and ojierHting charges Bishop J H. Kemp spent sevand on the wheat mounted have eral days at Ogden over the week cotton The VOU BeUD for (voLii Have same LET'S SEL Voii PO --TAS J V the goes end on business. board bought l.SKi.iXKl bales of Tne M I. A. sponsoicd an inPi A STSi SI-OVER VI WE tfAkiPS FLAT Gli TtF A cotton at lb 3 cents a pound and teresting conjoint meeting Sunday FATHE-TtlAT' OlicE around down been six cotton has v e BELiDixAG VOLiR emng cents The cotton us being held, AM. QolTlL AM1 IaJEAR Miss Vena Maughun spent the - k'kites ( -- vs. cu-- r by agi cement, until 1933 end at Newton. week A LAUkiDRV kitkER BE The situation became so des 3otOAi -- ftT The ward primary and school Vans board time the one ABLE Tb perate that at A3 children held their May festival, BASKErf J I Do suggested that all cotton farmA large numFriday afternoon SUIT BACK of a SMAP their third under ers plow' ber of parents enjoyed the proTlFTEEAi TIMES EUERV on cotton loss" The fA paper crop. tki SHAPE gram of May Queen contests, was estimated last November at MCR1U1U6, AiU KEEPS songs, dulls, musical games crown$75,000,(3X1. of the Mav Queen, Mrs Marie ME AS LIMBER AS A ing The paper losses," whnh the Maughan and braiding of the MayHose-HaqemV board declines to consider actual ga sUke M j A mUMC contest. pole. losses until the stabilization op- A iarge audlpne Mad eadacHe simce grceted the eration is completed, may increase s,KerP Mrs John c Broberg. H MOHAWKS TklED or decrease with the fluctuation of and lhe stake M j A ft(.tlvll oomnuttee had charge of the pro- Tc SCALP ME 1 I'" on lent board also Ihe money gram arrangements cotton up to 90 per cent of the Tht'se and other winners will hna market and prevailing pree born (need with a hvs of $40,- - participate with winners of Cache secured a,ld .LoHn st,ali? In. ml,MC' P,lbllc 010.011 in loans not no speak'ng. story, dancing, ticcaUM? of the great price drop. and diam at Brigham City. Monday and Tuesday, Mav 9 and 10 If you wish to be permanently is ,n the regional contests The taxpayer, of coune. , relieved of gas m stomach and bound to get it in the neck and tory for the the L D S piepara-church Biialinaun s Gas Tab a?C tabiliRt!on effort hae been ,M I A final in Salt Lake Titv bowc!s i "S are prepared especially discredited As President Hoover during June conference time for stomach gas and all the bad said any such attempt at farm w d Hale the effects ogau resulting from gas pres- relief as the agricultural market- - Kccond ward chorus, . with lone sure ,5, mg act would be expenmental P' That cnlPtv- gnawing feeling at the. a The experimental attempt to buck by the P of thc stomach will disap- 'the law of supply ami demand p pear, th it anxious, nervous feeling .!' 1 i!!1 ls A' lth TcsMe with during a period of huge world- heart palpitation will vanish, wide agricultural overproduction Other numbers in the program and you will again be able to take and ended included two selections, by the a deep breath w ithout discomfort disastrously That drowsy, sleepy feeling after A tremendous amount of criti- - missionary chorus, a violin solo. o cism has followed revelation that by Miss Gladys Bailey; a piano dinner will be replaied by a reThain numkrby Carlisle; officials of sire for entertainment. spon- Bloating L. J. marKi Montrose and by will cease sored hv the board have been re- Your limbs, arms and b.v President Connie P.av- fingers will no longer feel cold and reiving salaries of $75,900 and Pra.vers of 10,ld the stake and YLMIA. to go $9.0iirt a year respectively, with sleep" because Bnalmann's salaries of other officers in pro- - Superintendent N D. Salisbury of Gas Tablets prevent gas from .the etaae VMM I A. w ith the circulation. Get AH stake contestants in The board created or heiptd singing the genuine, :n the yellow package re expected to be in Salt Lake for at any good drug store. Price $1. create such national Advertisement agencies fm the June conference. Oh. see the man! Is the man rich? Yea, the man is very rich. He is a la a great Wall ." tion of sound synchromzatioi which brings to life the voices lor-geso- w I i) the worlds mo? sensational motion picture, rnaki return at the Capi j a triumphant tol theater, with the added attra Ben-Hur- Spontaneity and real grace characterized the five natural danceg, fittingly closed with a picturesque scarf waltz to Strauss' Behind the gray walls of San Quentin prison a man sits and thinks. ' That man is Tom Mooney, whose crime was that lie agitated'' for better conditions for himself and his fellow man. Behind the' gray walls of San Quentin he is reviewing in his mind the San Francisco bombing tragedy of 1916, his rapid conviction as an accomplice in that admission crime, his sentence of death,' the that the testimony which convicted him was puriwsely perjured, the intervention of President Woodrow Wilson, tils reprieve, his long fight for freedom. Ins refusal to accept parole. And then the crowning blow the liowing and scrolling of Gov. Janies Rolph Jr., turning away from that liberal element that elected him, in favor of Big Business that must dictate his political future. ' Gov. James Rolpli Jr. whose heart turned to jelly when called upon to right Californias greatest public ALKIE OPICS Capitol Theater Nibley hall was filled almost to capacity for the Dress Revue presented Monday evening at the Logan high school and an equally large vudience watched the Dance Festival on the east lawn. About 45 girls participated in the dancing, all members of the dancing classes. The Gypsy, Russian and Hungarian folk dances were delightful with their colorful costumes, and were marked by a most artistic adherence to the native spirit of each dance. Quaint fifteenth, century costumes were featured in the court ladies' Mazueka and .waltz, and the Pierrot and Pierette and the graceful Cathucha closed the (oik dances. last-minu- te tpr T FESTIVAL MONDAY ever-popul- ar all St DRESS REVUE AND Hyde Park st BAIUN POWDEI two-thir- ds no-ho- st Today and Thursday $30,-00- ... rough-and-tumb- , well-know- n. large-scal- -- Triit-(oma- Yfx(jol(uyn ss OUR BOARDING HOUSE WI-rtfo- floor, Lif Ahern J M a of "flu I my Irength. My appetite waa gone. I was aick and shaky. In desperation I tried Tan-laIn 2 weeks' time I was a different person. 1 am now well and strong again. - Mrs. After couldn't recover Y barrel thisll size of rr rf fqr a .. T . a No More Gas T In Stomach and Bowels ' urrl rflSSla. i i Ada Hendrickson. Salt Lake Tanlac ha City, Utah. There Musi! improved digestion derfully. I am now able to do all of my own hmisewofk and take care of several of mv Mr. Hilda grandchildren. Norctl. Salt Lake City, Utah. lie Seme! Iiiu in TAM. AC i Ituilil Yon II ... irmt my and appetite won- l ike Tills . . . 100,000 people any "TOU might doubt the testimony of a dozen or even a hundred peoplc.But when over 100.000 men and women write and tell about the marvelous benefits they have derived from taking Tanlac-thatdifferent. This extraordinary endorsement must command the respect and confidence of every intelligent person. In a simple, straightforward way, these people tell how they were si ok, took Tanlac, and now are well again; how this wonderful tonic puts new vigor and energy in weak, bodies; regulates the stomach and bowels, tones up the nerves, removes the cause of headaches, dizziness, sleeplessness. s On the testimony of these 100,000 people, try Tanlac today. It will help you, as it has helped millions Tanlac deterve your confidence. A regti-terf- d pharmacist THE NATION'S TONIC . of other sufferers. Tanlac is a scientific tonic and health builder, each of its ingredients recognized for its medicinal value in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. It is utterly harmless. 55 million bottles used have made Tanlac the Nation's Tonic, the safe, dependable remedy you need to build new energy, wake up your liver, improve your digestion, purify your blood. Go to your druggist today and get a bottle of Tanlac. A big bottle sells for very little. It must help you or you get your money back. OVER 55,000,000 BOTTLES USED su- pervise the preparation of every bottle. |