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Show CACHE VALLEY DAILY LOGAN (UTAH) PAGE TWO HERALD, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 1 9 3 0. The Saddest Thing in all the World is a Man of Broken Courage. Campaign That Is Strongly Recommended! Another "Shop Now TTY ii il A TTTF TT n IT uii in -jj D 6 Every afternoon, except Saturday, and Sunday morning. Published Sunday morning and every week day afternoon, except Saturday and legal holidays, at 8 Federal Ave., Logan, Utah, by Cache Valley Newssecond clasts matter paper Co.. N. Gunnar liasnt'JRon, president, and entered Subscription t8 the postoffice, Logan, Utah, under the act of March 3 ,1879 iriler. price $2 the year. In advance, or 25 cents the month delivered by Scnppi Canfield 36-S- San Francisco office, 507 Moatgomi-- y St.; Gilman, Nlccll & Rjthman, Special Representatives Chicago office, 410 N. Michigan Ave.; New York office, 19 W. 44th St.; Boston office, 18 Tremont St.; Detroit office. Room ?, 26 General Motors Bldg. N.K.A. THE TRUTH Service, All logi'tlirr, Ivliowour old Aln.it Mater I. v noon. Mrs. Harry Olsen of Ogdon was a Millville visitor on Saturday and to: Sunday. Upon her return home she was accompanied by Mrs. Matilda Olsen and Miss Veoia Olsen who will spend the week lp Ogden Mr. and Mrs. Charles Anderson entertained at a supper on Monday evening In honor of Mr. Anderson's A beautita! bouquet of birthday. Dahlias formed the centerpiece. Those present were, Mr. and Mrs. Newel Olsen and Mr. and Mrs. Anderson and Mrs Sylvester Anderson. Martin Shaffer, Jr., of Salt Lake Sunday with his parCity ents Mr. and Mrs. Martin L. Shaf- This Is Amos Blimp, who has doubted the attendance at hit mid- "v rN get golf course, It came as something of a surprise the other day that the government had filed, in the District of Colombia court of appeals, a brief seeking to uphold the conviction of Albert B. Fall, who is still trying to escape the year's imprisonment given him for taking a $100,000 bribe from E. L. Doheny. Offhand, one would have supposed that that case had been settled long ago. But since it has not, the whole business is worth looking into not because of any burning desire to see Fall behind the bars, but because the case illustrates so perfectly the delays of American criminal law. By Dr. Morris Fishbein Editor, Journal of the American Medical Association, and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine When people whose circulation in he skin is poor are exposed to sometimes old, the exposure t auaes injuries that are exceedingly painful. Uf this type is the condition m-- i 1 nown which as chilblain, o1vp3 a redness and swelling of the hands and feet, particularly in poorly nourished children who have been exposed to the dampness. The area In which rhilblalna the color disrecurs Is bluish-red- . The area ci nearing on pressure. rally feels cool, but sometimes . clammy because of excessive Chilblain naturally i , rspiration. not seen In the summer but only in the winter. in Of the greatest importance the treatment of chilblain are two which have been demethods veloped In recent years. One of of the these involves heating rea by the use of a bath of melt- It Is usually J paraffin wax. best first to cleanse the parts with hot water and massage them gently with some simple oint- timer ItAril RAH! RAH! Wll-for- providing by to read HOT PARAFFIN BATHS AID CHILBLAIN SUFFERERS a Pennsylvania' THE LAWS DELAY T T -. Rahl Rah' Rah! Bookkeeping ic Lessons Accounting department! VI to IX, imlublve! International School, Scranton. Corespondence QUICK Neither this newspaper, nor any of Its stockholders or officials has any connection- whatever, oother pridirectly or Indirectly, with any political party, public utility, real estate promotion vate business except the publication of newspapers devoted solely to disinterested public service. OTT1S UETERSON, Managlrg Editor HARRY S. LESTER, Advertising Manager. Lets Be 7,7 neauny Mr. and Mrs. Neel Olsen and family, Mr. and Mrs. WTlford Anderson and Mrs. Arlean Anderson of Clifton were luncheon guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Anderson on Sunday evening. Mrs. Clara Cutler and daughiem, Beatrice and Beth, iipent & few dava this week in Salt Lake and Ogden. Mrs. Theodore Gessel spent Thursday with her parents Mr. and Mrs Joseph M. Jenson. Mr. and Mrs. Wllford Anderson were dinner gees's of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Larsen on Sunday after- And now, Howdy, folki! hugging uur psyciicik, to uarh through the line of bill collectors, making a sensational open field run for home! Touchdown, touchdown! Proclaim liberty thruout the land Member Audit Bureau of Circulation, Full leased wire of the United Piess. Western Features, and the Scrlpps Canfield Newspapers Millville Vic; ii Newspaper Scripps-Canfiel- d players with au- h e ntic college Mr. atmosphere. Blimp has hired a u n i v e r s ity sophomore to lead 1 t spectators i AT THE FOOTBALL GAME Senate more than six years ago. During all of the time since then it has dragged along, through one court after another. In six years time our legal machinery has not yet been able ta decide finally whether Fall is innocent or guilty. What a commentary on the snail-lik- e pace that justice has taken in twentieth century America! . Go get the ambulance ready For the fellow who sits next to me; Who yells "Rotten! and "Sap! And explains what the next play should be! "Cows, no larger than dogs found News item. Now we in Africa. know where our local restaurants get their steaks. n-- 1 Forem n Agin Em , ... People with a tendency to blains should wear woolen socks and perhaps even thick shoes or hoots in c'lld weather. The feet or hands may be warmed by the use of an electric pad, a heat .amp, or by immerdon in a bath of melted paraftin wax with a temperature of about 120 degrees. By remaining in this paraffin up the wealth Of the state. In recent years, capital has turned more and more from investments In land, mines, and railroads, and toward investments In stocks, bonds, mortgages, and other such This change forms of property. has brought about a new situation When our cpnsti-tutioin our state. was made tangible property was responsible for practically all of the income of the state, while today it is respon-aiblof for only about the Income of the Rtate. Intangible property, formerly producing almost nothing, today produces inof the about come of "the slate. , Now our constitution names two types of Intangible property, mortgage and stocks in Utah corporations. - Mortgages aro exempted entirely from taxation, and so also, under one condition, are stocks In Utah corporations. The reading of the constitution is as Provided further: that follows: mortgages upon real and personal property shall be exempt Irom taxation. (Article XIH, Section The word property, as used 3.) in this article, is hereby declared to include moneys, credits, bonds, stocks, franchises, and all matters and things (real. personal ami mixed) capable of private owne: ship; but this shall nof be ,o const, ued as to authorize the .c'.i of anv com'.txation of pany or v' corMV a, when the property of stl't. .'.i'sjy .ecuor corporation repies. i d stocks of anv company ot corporation, whe nthe property of such company or corporation represented by such stocks, has been taxed. (Article Nil!, Section so at the present time the hulk of intangible property in the state is exempted from taxation hy the coust'tution.. Vast sums of money in the hands of private ow ners, mortgage and loin companies and others enjoy this exemption. Furthermore, court rulings have heen made which establish the piinriple that It' a piece of prop-etty- , or a cLjss qf pioperty is exempted from; taxation, the income therefrom cannot 'he taxed. This means that if an iucome tax were enacted in Utah with our constitution readipe as it does at piesent, we .still could' (not tax the great hnik.nf Intang-- ! ible property either by means of a mil! rate tax or an income ,tax. Our contnution simply must changed in such a way as to j be remove the present exemptions on mortgages and shares of stock' befme ia- in Utah corporations tangible property can be made to bear its fair share of (he costs of government in our state. A vote for amendment two at the win c!ortioT! bin jti coirsi.yr Life litre fs?u! y fllvut btiuniui; change. -- WALLACE J WICKERS , - Teachers and Pupils informative, of You will find a wealth compact, subinteresting and authoritative material on school listed jects of a wide range in the sixteen bulletins, below, which our Washington Bureau has ready for you put up in a single packet. The titles are: 1. How the United States Grew. 2. The States of the Union 3. History of the U. S. Constitution 4. History of the U. S. Hag 5. American Wars 6. How Congress Operates 7. The Presidency artd its powers and duties 8. Words that have made History 9. Biographies of the Presidents 10. Popular Astronomy 11. Weather and Climate 12. Famous Buildings 13. Common Errors in English 14. Debaters Manual 15. Wonders of Nature 16. The Judicial System of the U. S. . ... wed try all sorts of experiments with them in government and in housing and in city planning and m transportation and we'Jl bet wed nave some REAL fun until shot by some indignant citiren WWW Ford and Mr. Morgan for but these to them are rath- instance aro always inveighing road and was in a wagon rut. er. trifling ' against socialism and bolshevism WWW w w w well if wo were Mr. Ford Many a business man, whose secwe would buy a county someIf we had a few hundred retary says he la "In conference" handy we'd go out and where and put sip - city and this afternoon, can be found out at the tootball field, cheering the team. Mr. W - K A-- l, The height of the Brooklyn Bridge over the river at its center ' Is about 135 feet. money are yachts and airplanes and ocean cruises and country homes and maybe a fleet of automobiles ail these toys must pall in time but human nature and its wqrklngs never pall and there's no better Investment on earth If somebody LISTEN: AND, will give us a couple hundred WWW Our richest men it seems to millions for a starter well demus lack imagination onstrate to the worlds billionthe only things they can aires how to have a really good think of on which to spend time for a few years. W FIRST PHOTOGRAPH OF BIG GAME! Picture shows Clive Remund plunging through Wyoming line. Aggies made three yards on this play, and the Cowboy team lost four teeth snd an ear. It was a trick play, a cross between a halfnelson and a Norwegian toehold, directed through the Wyoming short-stop- . Three cheers and a huzza, fellows! Team! Team! Team! Size suggests leadership the big store, the big boat, the big hotel, are thought of as the best. WWW Why do people talk so proudly of having horse sense? Horse sense consists mostly in stopping in front of all the houses where your former o ner delivered milk. Plan sour 1931 Adver- WWW campaign tising YE DIARY (October 24) Earlie up, and turn on the ma.g-icmusique box, which do be troadcasting morning calisthenicks, and so to bending this way and that, kicking up legs, waving arms, and hopping up and .down, .and anon Dame Humor doth aske me to brirg in some woode for the which make . me mighty wroth, for .Lord! if I do haul in gqgate sticks for wood, how can I And .so take my daily exercise? to breakfast. k fyre-plac- to in- PAINTED BULLETINS clude painted ' I . It t Kill increase the value of your iNeuspapcr the big thing in Advertising will give leadership and domination to your product and make it thought of as the best. OUTDOOR ADVERTISING Ad- vertising hy Constant daily reminder. . Yet this size that dominates and commands is only one of the many reasons why OUTDOOR ADVERTISING is seen and remembered. - . you want this packet of 16 bulletins, fill out the coupon below and mail as directed: J fYfHEM YOU TAKE THINGS AS THEY : THEY SELDOM DO 'ill COME. , I Washington Bureau, Daily Herald 1322 New York Ave., Washington, D. C. I want the packet of 16 educational bulletins, and enclose herewith 50 cents in coin, of unused U. S. postage stamps, to cover return postage and handling costs: I ST. and NO STATE I am a reader of the Daily Logan (TJtahJ Herald. (qM j NAME CITY j or a couple of For those who like to play tennis at dawn or dusk, a ball that is visible at those times Is being introduced in England. The ball is given a boat of phosphorescence by treating It with sulphur In a special process. three-fourth- s 'j If DEPARTMENT We may be all haywire but buy a whole city It seems to us that people like counties Mr. Ford and Mr. Morgan who and run em Or if we were Mr. Morgan we'd buy a chunk of thq land somewhere and people it with communist and let them go to it they would settle more in a couple of years than all the ar-- j gumeut from now until doomsday and meanwhile we'd have a lot of good clean fun looking on the and experiment watching out w ould and so incidentally the rest of the world Arlean' Anerson spent the past week with Mrs. and Mrs, Charles Anderson. Mrs. Hector Draper and family of Holiday ( August Larsen of Logan were dinner guests of Mrs. Engre Larsen on Sunday afternoon. T. H. Cutler speht the week end in Salt Lake City. David Jessop of Rock Springs, Wyoming, arrived here on Sunday for a two weeks visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Jessop. e , , WWW mil-liof- chil- The constitution of Utah presents some real problems In the luxation of intangible property. The document was drawn before the recent great development of Ibis type of wealth. At the time our constitution was made, thP type of property called real and property, together with bath, the pain disappears and the "personal circulation in the tissues Is. great- mines and public utilities made ly improved through the retention of the heat. One of the rea- provement In the condition of the sons for the use of melted paraf- circulation and apparently is benfin wax instead of hot water is eficial to the skin in the area tlie fact that water of a temper- concerned. The basic question Involved in ature of 110 degrees Is about as high as the patient can stand, all of these cases is, of course, whereas the paraffin wax bath the condition of the health of the ma1 hu maintained at a temper- patient which causes him to deHence it is s'.' re of 128 degrees for at least velop the chilblains. 2 minutes without compiaim important to improve the circula'iom the putient concerning the tion In the tissues by regular heat. expreise and massage, and to ImChilblains seem to he Imne'ited, prove the general hp<h by use of ultn- - or amounts of the necessary foods moreover, by violet rays. The applic - 'n of end prpper amounts of sleep and :nrest. the rays usually bring 1.. have almost unlimited money at their disposal mtsa a lot of fun they might have Mr. Fo.d goes around buying j little things like antrumpery cient automobtleii and ' a dilapiAnd then there was the driver datedMr.schoolhonse or two Morgan huyS a painting of a bantam car who thought he a while or occasionally was In a deep canyon, until he once in a new yacht realized he was driving over a dirt orders TODAYS DEFINITION ? ment By JIM MARSHALL A small town is one where there Is no traffic problem ex eept on Saturday night. This column is for the use of Daily Herald readers. Any communications not libelous and not over 300 words in length are welcome, no matter what the subject No anonymous artides will be published. The Herald, however, does not necessarily agree with opinions expressed here. They arc the individual ideas of the writers. s The OBSERVER Im shooting the chap ..t then turn it over to the socialists to see what they could do with it succeed or maybe they'd but more probably theyd fail however it came out it would demonstrate one thing or another and so save a lot of argument i j Virginia Dare, born in James-- ! town. Va is said to have been I'le first white rhild born in the United States. - i I.ugan Sail Lake Cuy Ogden This of is the tmrd of a series advertisements OutOn door Advertising. J 4 d fer. Mrs In campus cheers, whenever a player makes a hole in one. Varsity songs are chanted to comfort players who cannot make the little ball run through a sect'on of drain pipe. The offense complained of was first aired in the If ,i V |