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Show I J I i J !i i CACHE AMERICAN, LOGAN, UTAH r Roosevelt Has Never Wavered Follows Path Laid Out in Inaugural; Court Clarifies Pules of Game By EARL GODWIN the decision foice the New lenl to abandon Its 111 It now have to principles? tcontent Itself merely by s routine management of the gm eminent? W III Roosevelt turu at the next election? Many people believe so Jinny people have declared the New I tea I Is dead. Many reai tlonary leaders ready right now to none Into lre the White House without waiting for an election j People who hold that Idea look on the New Deal us a sort of racket outlawed by the (court because of some Inherent dls Will WASHINGTON. S mediate curtailment But on the other hand, there Is plenty of Indl cation that If the social Justice pro gram of the Newt Deni ennnot be put through congress again because of the Constitution, there will be a serious campaign to amend the Constitution. Roosevelt s greatest trouble Is going to be with the radicals; this country la not going to follow a conservative leader for some time to come. But Roosevelt will have to keep his flock from running off behind every Iied Piper who offers more than the other fellow. For k time In the next campaign It will look as If the country were going ti be sold to the highest bidder, and that's where Roosevelt will have to use (and he will) every re source at his command to maintain his victorious following nnd their faith In his common si n e hniminl Mi i GOLDEN Fascinating Tales of Lost Mines eaiih NICHOLAS i. sum eu THE LOST CABIN MINE In the Big Horn richer than It was found the Comstock lode in 1S(, i, and lost In 1S64, but Some dav a lucky prospector will find It again open up its neglected tun nels and build a new cabin where the old one stood Three men Allen Hulbert Cox and Tones were the first to discover T hev had this bon in gone out on a prosjiei ting trip from Walla Wall i and some time In the spring of ls6i they found themselves In the wild st pirt of the United 'states T hev h id been going through terrible hardships, floating on a ra"t down the Big Horn and trav elmg at night to avoid hostile In chans. Men In their senses would have recoiled at the hare Idea of such an adventure but these men were bewitched bv a golden phantom ; they kept on prospecting as they went At last, there in the Big Horns they found a wonderful pav streak, which panned "all the way front five cents to one dollar each trial" This was their rainbow end, and here they planned to stay through the next winter By the time wa ter froze overnight, each had something like half a bushel of gold. W inter passed all too slowly. As soon as the first spring warmth came to the little valley, they were on the Job again What their plans were, no one can tell Perhaps they expected to go to Walla Walla that summer, laden with treasure; or they may have decided to stay on until either they or the nuggets were exhausted. But these plans were destined never to be completed, for Indians suddenly fell on Cox and Jones, killed nnd scalped them, and rifled the cabin Ilulhert who had gone some distance off, saw the horrible sight, but was powerless to help his partners As soon as the marauders left, Hulbert hurried down to the cabin The gold was still there, and he packed a knapsack full buried the rest, and struck out In the opposite direction taken by the Indians After 18 days through wild, unknown countiy, he reached the North Platte river, and found the old trail to California Here he met up with a large party of gold seekers heading toward the northwest. On hearing his story, part of the enormous crowd decided to return with him to the mine, and more than 500 people, with 140 wagons, accepted him as their leader. How was a man to retrace a trail like his How could he remember every landmark, every direction of those terrible 18 dins of flight Hill bert thought he could, hut all summer long he tried In vain to reaih that abandoned cabin where the bodies of his friends guarded the At last he was golden treasure forced to admit defeat, and the angrv crowd, after even once gatti ering to hnrii their bewildered lead er, started westwaid Since then main a good prospector has spent years In the effort to locate the Lost Cabin mine Old Puicuke Coin-roby Nevada men, searched for it in ram Then during the Sioux uprising, when the Big Horn country was alive with Indians, three men made their way to the head of the Little Big Horn, and here they found what must have been the real mother lode of the Lost Cabin It was the largest known gold bodv of rich quartz In the world! The newcomers built a boat, loaded It with gold, and planned to float down the river until they reached a settlement Here they would outfit and return to where fortune had smiled her golden grin at them But death lurked downstream ; the Sioux camp, stretched along the river was more than three miles long, and 6 000 warriors waited and longed for a chance to spill white mans blood It was midnight when the awkward boat started past this gigantic camp, a dog, sniffing the air, baiked excitedly. A sentinel peered and listened. The rapids of the Little Big Horn reached for the boat. In ha-tthe miners grew panicky a moment more, and the boat overturned another, and they were captives of the hostile Sioux In the 'scuffle that ensued one man managed to get awav. He had no food, no weapons, and his clothing had been torn until only a few rags covered him. But he had clenched his hand over a couple of nuggets, and these he kept during the days when he wandered In search of a settlement. At last he stumbled Into a little town. W hat hapened to Sitting Bull, Custer, and the rest, Is history. The country became safe from Indians again. But the one man who could have trailed the golden phantom back to the Lost Cabin lode sat In the sunshine and babbled of Immense wealth, of hunger, of Indians, of his beautiful yellow nuggets a garrulous, senseless idiot. SOMEWHERE a mine 1 to forget that the court's slap at NI!A was orilv one of several huge h ippenings about that time. On the construe live side of the New Deal the wheat firmers hud Just American voted about six to one to continue the AAA wheat reduction contracts People By CI1LRIE PHANTOMS r iu n mi) are likely the face of preclic lions from the opposition that the AAA would crash; congress also extended the life of the Home Owners' Loan cor Ihonesty. poratlcm, the New Deal device to j The fact Is the court did not keep Americans from being route'll touch on the motives of the New from their homes by the sheriff under Deal; It merely restated the rules mortgage foreclosures. The IIOIC of the game. It did not say that now has 51.710 000000 more credit child labor Is right, Hint chiseling to extend to distressed home own Is right, that the oppression of em- ers. It came Just at the time, too, ployees by employers Is right that that the New Deals $4 OOO 000 OOO jforeed working for six days a week work relief program started, with for ten hours a day Is right, but It Its objective of Jobs Instead of the did say that if congress wants these dole. It will be a clever npiKisitlon things corrected. It must not depend leader who can hide these things on the White House; It cannot delefrom public appreciation. gate the lawmaking power to the The Frazier Lemke act, outlawed President; but must set up Its own along with NRA, was not a part of . admlnls-Iterto President the laws for the New Deni, but the attempt of western liberals to help the disThe New Deni moves on, now, tressed farmers who were losing with the laws clarified. their forms because they could not With that In mind, remember that pay Interest during the depression (Roosevelt has never wavered from The act extended a five year morInaug-inral In he bis Indicated (the path atorium on Interest payments and address. He Is Just as liberal, scaled down prices so that farm Just as progressive, Just as mindful ers could redeem their farms at tof the forgotten man and the home a reduction. Undoubtedly a diastlc builders as he ever was. performance, and Roosevelt beI With the court defining the road lieved It would never stand up In by which the New Peal can procourt. But the Idea of preserving ceed, the next New Deal plutform the farm homes of the country Is sowill be a much more definite cially aound; and this government than the one on which the will be asked by the farm commuDemocrats ran Roosevelt against nity for help In some way, sooner Hoover. People know now what the or later. If the farm debt cant be New Deal stands for and there have paid by bringing down the debt figIbeen definite signs of progress. ures there will be a most determined effort to produce a lot of NRA ACCOMPLISHMENTS cheap money by whhh the debts jT In the first place the people were can be paid with less effort fed. The false sciueamlsliness that made people shudder at the United THE NEXT CAMPAIGN States government, richest In the The suggestion that the Constituworld, feeding its poor people, has tion may play a part In the coming (disappeared. political campaign does not arise The NRA reduced hours, outalone within the ranks of the New child lawed labor, stopped piratical Deal. A group of wealthy and powprice cutting. Increased wages erful Interests have been conspirland by these devices Increased eming to spring a new political party ployment by three million men and to be known as the Constitution women, which Hugh Johnson, first party on the voters. This group is pS'RA chief, says Is more than will typified by Jouett Shouse, Liberty be empoyed by the big w oik relief leaguer; by Senator Harry Byrd of jiropram. Virginia; by Balnbridge Colby, Wall NRA policies Increased purebas Street lawyer; Alfred E Smith, and lBg power 80 per cent, width Is by numerous Republicans who see (Partly responsible for the Increase In a third party a chance to ruin jn farm Incomes this year. Roosevelt. NRA Is looked on ns a refuge for The main usefulness of a ConstiIn vvoik who ithe men factories; tution party would he among southlooked on NRA as its filend. the men who favor It ern voters, Agriculture was closely bound up think, because the South will not tin NRA; the com t decision mny advote Republican again for a long versely affect AA A. But not In time If ever. The Constitution to routine as the principle; merely Includes the poisoning of ethods by which these New Deal party plot South the against Roosevelt After principles were administered. been accomplished tbe has that Now It Is folly to assume that any ; Constitution party intends to put up ipolltlcal party will dare go to the a ticket of electors In each southjpeople for votes on the mere fact ern state. There would be no na New court declared the the that tlonnl Constitution party ticket (Deal was handling these beneficial a chance to send electors simply principles the wrong way. from the South to Washington to ( Because In the first place by the vote for a President Just as was (time the next election comes around for by the Constitution ; the New Deal will have found the arranged but the trick Is that when the to keep up wages; keep right way here they would all down chiselling; guarantee decent electors arrive vote for the man whom the Repubhours ; safeguard the working mans licans ran as candidate for the Pres rights. Is a gum shoe method One of the developments to ldency. It of making the South vote Republicwatch Is the growing conviction that without knowing It; and Is about If the Constitution and the high an as crazy as they come nnd I would court hamper the progiess of social not waste time In relating It to 'Justice a change must be made. were It not for the fact that you There Is already a resolution pendIt Is actually being plotted In high In bv Senator congress Costlgan ing places. It has gone so far that A1 Of Colorado, prov Iding for an amendhimself has been consulted; ment to the Constitution, which Smith the plan his blessing In prihe gave would put the New Deal right back refused to be Identified and vate .where It was before the court deIt In public. with cision. It would give the federal The Constitution party would put government the right to supervise forward a theory that the Const! manufacture, guar(business, trade, by tbe antee labor rights, fair practice, etc. tutlon Is being asstrained a matter of fact New Deal; when the would be twenty second that Constitution Is It being strained amendment There are also a flock the progress of the nation. The by of bills In congress curtailing the opposite view one which Is being power of the Supreme court. Many taken by a great many of the best Jiberals believe the veto power of minds Is that the Constitution will .the high court Is a dangerous curhave to be eased up a bit, so that tailment of liberty. On the day trend toward uniform and na the the court wrecked NRA, Rep- tlonal treatment of national ques resentative Monoghan of Montana tions can be undertaken by the delivered a masterful speech on the federal government without quespowers of the Supreme court, tak- tion. court In the has that view the ing The same school of thought which many Instances destroyed liberty believes all problems should be IL rather than granted solved on a states rights basis was This sounds revolutionary; but It at one time quite positive that the was also the view of Thomas Jef- federal government had no right forLa elder the Follette, ferson, to erect lighthouses on the coasts of mer Senator Owen of Oklahoma, a state to guide and protect shipend others. ping. To have maintained that Idea in practice would mean that there j RADICALS TROUBLESOME would have to be various lightI hasten to say, however, that house organizations and different there Is no present strength that coastwise shipping rules for eacb would permit a prediction that the coastal state. court' powers are In danger of tin- C Western Tewepnper Union docu-jme- Philippine Independence Won After Struggle of Centuries Summer Bride in Lace or Chiffon In tLiw,ili,...i., President Roosevelt Handing Signed Philippine Quezon, President of the Philippine Senate. Aguinaldo, Who May Be a Candidate for President Manuel By WILLIAM C. UTLEY. Admiral Dewey a guns had hardly concluded their pronouncement that America had become a world power, and the echoes were still rumbling over Manila bay, the 10, IKK), 000 Inhabitants of the Philippines were already demanding complete politkul independence. Ten years from this coming Fourth of July they may get it at last, after a long struggle, both physical and diplomatic. President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed his name In Ink to the constitution of the new Philippine government So did Manuel Quezon, president of Six weeks bethe Island senate. fore that, members of the Philippine house of representatives signed it, one of them In his own blood. Philippine Independence has not always been our worry. The strug gle had Its beginning centuries before the United States ever existed The story really opens, so far as the white race Is concerned. In the year 1521, when Fernando Magellan, that most Irrepressible of all gad discovered the archiabouts, pelago of the eastern Pacific It may be well imnglned that Skipper hearties, with many JIagellan8 moons on the oiien sea having de pleted their food supply to the extent that the dinner menu consisted of fricassee of leather riggings and boiled tongue (of shoe), hailed the Islands with delight. The native rice and sugar, which would have been Just another Tuesday night dessert at Mrs Gomez Seamans home back In sunny Spain, must have looked to them like a banquet for the gods. Senor Magellan Is still there, but not because he fell In love with the scenery. He wns killed by natives on the Island of MncMin And what remained of his stout hearted crew continued aiound the globe without him. When the boys got back home they were pretty much the toasts of their respective communities and were invited to address the local Kiwanis and Rotary and the Iberian equivalent of what we call the not Stove league. Egged on with bribes of hot tamales and rare Castllllan wines, they were not above spellbinding wide eyed senorllas with reluctant admissions of their daring deeds. Mixed In with their revelations there was probably a little truth and the word eventually got out that there were Philippine Islands somewhere In the Pacific, say about two mutinies and three fam lnes out from Barcelona. 1S98, when IN Bullied the Natives. At any rate, Spanish sailors of the next generation again found the Philippines, and began bullying the natives Into submission In 1565, gaining complete control In 1570 It Is doubtful If these Spaniards knew, or anybody else knew until the Rand McNally map makers got busy, that their new colonial bold lngs Included 7.0S3 Islands two of them, Luzon and Mindanao, 40000 and 3S.000 square miles In area, and nine others more than 1,000 square miles apiece. However, Filipinos, like elephants, never forget, and the idea of complete Independence kept rankling in their minds for quite a spell nn til In 1S96 It swelled forth In open revolt under Emilio Aguinaldo. The Spanish rulers pacified Senor Again-ald- o with threats, promises and goodness knows how man; pesetas, and he and bis principal henchmen retired to the heterogeneous obscurity of nong Kong in 1S97, there to plan thel' subsequent revolt In 1898. Id that year America won the war with Spain and Spain ceded the islands to the United States for The Filipinos thought $20,000,000. tbe; ought to be given Independence at that time, and when tbe; failed to get It tbe; broke out again and were not pacified until Jul; 4,1901. Tbe United States still later arrested an Independence movement b; granting them an autonomous Constitution to Inset, Emilio government under the Junes act of 1910 The Islunders were quick to offer their aid to the United States In the World war. and as soon as It was over began a consistent petitioning for Independents width has never subsided Must Wait Ten Year They made gome headway In December of 1932, when congress passed the Hawes Cutting bill Tills provided that, subject to the approval of the bill by the Philippine legislature, the islands would be allowed to draw up a republican constitution which would have to be acceptable both to them and to the President of the United States Then, after a period of ten years, the Islands would be granted com- will have eleven justices ically ret lied at seventy, dcilnre a iw or treaty tutional lit a two Hurds vole automatwho can unconsti- majority Women to Vote on Suffrage. men over twentv-on- e will be allowed to vote A plebiscite will be held In two vears on woman suffrage, and If TtkMXK) women vote for It thej will he given the right literate of suffrage All mituril resources are to become the property of the state, not ten the plete independence. During to he leased for longer than 25 years, exports and the number of The slate mav operate and years Philippine Immigrants to the United States would be restricted After establish Industries aud systems of and transportation, that the Islands were to lie outside communication In the Interests of national defense the American tariff wall The state will protect labor and President Hoover vetoed the bill regulate relations between land Jununry 13, 19 D, on the grounds lords and tenants and between , that It had been selfishly plnnned bor and It may provide for capital to protect American agriculture coinpulsorv arbitration against Philippine labor and prod Treaties will he ratified by a madid It not dis ucts; satisfactorily of the assemblj, and that jority tocharge American responsibility wards the Islanders, who were nn bodvIt alone may declare war A hough the plebiscite on Mav ready for Independence (Economic 14 wns a landslide In favor of the Independence of the Philippines new constitution. It was held In must be attained before political the wake of an uprising which was he can successful" Independence was the way he put It); and it the bloodiest the islands had seen In 15 years There were several acwould lav the Islands open to the tual battles Constabulary officers danger of turbulent conditions In ultimate Iv quelled the uprising, hut the Far East Congress overrode not until 61 rebels were dead and the veto four days later. The Phil54 rebels nnd 10 constabularies ippine legislature rejected the bill wounded and Murphy Quezon nine months afterward were in the Inited Slates at the The new constitution was pre time pared under the conditions of the Dissatisfaction with the trade re Tydings McDuffie bill, which was of the quirement Inst the and by congress passed bill w is one of the things upon Roosevelt President signed by which the revolt w is hlimed Varied Resources Economic Future The Philippines are not, as mimv A congressional committee heed folks In the metropolitan centers of the states might believe, a nation of ed bv Senator Millard F Tv dings M elevator operators, bus boys and of inland, coauthor of the bill, has Just returned fmm the island professional ping pong pl.ners They with recommendations which will raise great quantities of rice, sugir cane, hemp, manlla, coconut, corn, prolnhlv provide material for a tobacco and maguey. Their forestry, study of their economic future The bill calls for a conference on that fishing and mining Is Important subject one vear before the com coThey manufacture sugar, cocoa, conut oil, cigars and cigarettes, monwe.alth period expires, hat it Is probible that tills will take place chocolate and coffee. In 1S95, before the American mar at an eirlier date The final outcome. It is thought, ket was opened up to them, the exports totaled about $19 000,0(X) In will result In one of the following 1929 It bad reached $164 000 000, possibilities: but (1) Complete Independence, exeverything although sugar slumped to a considerable degree actly as proposed, which will Involve (according to most authorduring the depression that followed While only 8 per cent of the ex- ities) economic rum and probable ports reached the United States be absorption of the Philippines by "an fore the islands became an Ameri Oriental power can possession, 61 per cent of them (2) Independence, exchanging tarare today sold In American markets. iff preference to the Islands for The present agreement Is not free entrance of American goods what the Philippines have long (3) Dominion government of the hoped for, but In their enthusiasm islands, allowing them trade preferdecided Is have It they apparently ence, but keeping a political string about all they will get, for In the attached to them. island plebiscite which followed tbe The. Islands are determined to signing of the constitution by Presi- have Independence, complete and dent Roosevelt, they approved the at any cost, according to Quezoh, document by an overwhelming vote who has fought for It In Women voted for the first time in circles In this country diplomatic for many the history of an oriental country, years, served as president of the bill as the result of a passed by Island senate since 1916, and will the legislature last December and In all likelihood be Its first piesl signed by Gov. Gen. Frank Murphy, dent. former mayor of Detroit. little diplomat, someThe The new Philippine constitution, where dapper about sixty years of age, ad which now becomes effective as mltted that his nation was setting soon as the existing government is out on a great adventure and would terminated by a proclamation of probably make mistakes President Roosevelt, Is much like What nation does not7 he asked. our own Constitution, with the fol "But we have been prepared for lowing important differences: our adventure by a great republic. The president may serve only We have trusted you In the past one term, six years. He can veto and have been rewarded for our any part of any bilk The legis- trust. We have depended upon you lature, with two minor exceptions, and have not been disappointed We more money know that we can count cannot appropriate upon you than bis budget calls for. The In the future." vice president Is a member of the Mentioned as a possible candidate cabinet, and cabinet members may to oppose Quezon for the presidency before the legislature. speak Is Aguinaldo, the same Emilio There will be only one leglsla Aguinaldo who led the revolts and tlve body, the assembly In times warfare more than thirty of war or other great national emer- guerillaago. Quezon then was bis years gency it can vote to make the pres- trusted lieutenant. ident a dictator The Supreme court W estern Newspaper Union, la-- Tvilings-MoDuffl- a ck e, grub-tak- ed most exquisite lace, or lovely vaporous chiffon, classic In Its simplicity choose either for your wedding gown Miss Summer Bride e and you win The fashions smile of appioval endearing charms of each are breath taking so we warn you Its going to be a difficult matter to LACE, decide There is no doubt about lace being definitely in tbe limelight for bridal gowns. In fact for the entire bridal party. For that matter, en thustasm for lace whether as a medium for bridal array or for all occasion ranging from simplest sports and daytime clothes to high formats, knows no bounds this sea son 1th the Importance of laee as their cue and inspiration, designers are doing wedding ensembles for this years midsummer brides that The simply baffle description. gown to the left In the Illustration than which Imagination can picture no lovelier. Is entirely of Imported Chantilly lace with wondrous lace bordered train It Is cut on prin ees lines with a high ruffled neck and a tunic effect The voluminous veil Is draped over a coronet of orange blossoms Not all brides are so favored by fortune as to be married In such gorgeous lace raiment However that need not at all discourage the e who Is for Instead of being entirely of lace many of the most attractive wed tills season ding gowns designed have lace worked In for yokes, and sleeves and perhaps insets and nu merous other Intriguing ways As to laee for the bridesmaids. It is a story too long, too dramatic and romantic to be briefly told Pic Y bride-to-h- BRIDESMAID IN LACE By CHKItlF M HOI AS ture a bevy of lovely ladies clad laces of delicate mesh whose colors take on the hues of tbe rainbow or a summertime garden of flowers. Lace hats they wear, and lace gloves and as like as not shoes In of lace. Chiffon the wedding gown? of fasliions most fascinating stories which should be told to brides who would wed In June or later In midsummertime The flair for chiffon evening and party frocks started In Paris and the vogue has become so pronounced that the call of midsummer night for fashions chiffon resounds throughout the length and breadth, of all fashinnland Which is merely tne prologue to wnat we are about to say In regard to the chic, the charm and the Importance of chiffon especially quality kind all-- i silk chiffon, for not only the brides' gown but for outfitting her attend ants even to the llttlest flower girl. In the exquisitely lovely wedding gown to the right In the picture, the poet finds Inspiration for a sonnet. the painter for a picture and the bride the realization of dreams; come true The theme of this wln-- i some bridal dress, which so obvi ously plavs np simplicity (a sophls-- l Heated simplicity. If you please) Is white silk chiffon Draped, It ls, In classic Grecian lines, for the latest gesture In renlms of formal fashion Is the draping of dlnpha-- , nous materials after the art of ancient Greek Now sculpturing comes the touch exquisite which climaxes the beauty ano sweet simplicity of this chiffon rhapsody and will cause all who behold to say of her the bride was a perfect she carries white violets picture for her bouquet for Thats another 15 Western Newspaper Union. SHIRT WAIST FROCK SLICK AND DASHING Theres a new and youthful shirtwaist frock that Is arousing loud cheers from the bleachers It Is a slick slim affair In dotted foulard with small boy collar short sleeves, a belt and buttons all the way down the front and It Is abnnt the most dashing and practical garment thus far evolved It comes In navy, black or brown, with red. yellow or white dots, and is a clt v version of the dotted linen frock that was the toast of the Palm Beach season. Its only trimming Is the stitched youthful collar and the stitched cuffs on Its brief sleeves, and that perhaps Is part of Its charm With It yon may wear a bandana cap of the same material, very new BDd springlike, with a Cossack look. Stockings Are Bursting Into Color in France Here Is news of another brand new model Stockings hnve burst Into color in France Tills Is not nearly so startling as It sounds The colors are soft, deep shades and will provide rasrinating shoe stocking combinations. In addition many of them are held lust under the knee Delicate white silk lace makes a hy lastex hnnd They are rlhhed, frock which Is perfect for the English fashion like mens socks tn bridesmaid at a formal summei llsleg and meshes, made sturdy for wedding, or for the bride who hard wear and Inexpensive. After you get used to the Idea, Is being married Informally The ruffled bertha cape covers a com cant yon picture, them with tweeds plete evening gown. The little and sports things? In the country, ruffled peasant cap Is In line with hlue green and maroon storking the trend toward head coverings for will stride across the fields and formal wear, such as the Indian sari over the links. In town smart leg or Hindu ihram scarf. The mitts will shop and tea In navy bine. of the silk lace have flaring elbow sleeves. Lac Hat Starched lace makes many lovely Raffia Makes Berets little hats particularly suitable for Berets of raffia are popular In summer evening wear wear them In pastel shades to mail b LoDdon and are worn with match their gowns. Ing belts and bandbaga. Krldc-mul- |