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Show .store Root crops Due Be Win Seem Rebels to to Spanish and Make Profit A' ci.-ilize- C orx It-- r H N 'J Srr ' ' a tt ds1 crtps as beets, turnips, parsnips tnd rutabagas m e field as sc.-- as the weather becomes cold, mar y farmers are able to take adar'.age cf a profitable .market for tn-- s vegetables durirrg Winter. The storage operator, is simple, location is necesbut a tut place sary. Do ret d.g a trench, the vegetables on e surface cf the ground m rectangular p.les with 25, bushels in each. The 50, 75 or ! proper s2e of the pile depnds upon the number of bushels to be taken out for sale at one time. After the roots have been reatly arranged in the p.le. cover them with frcm four to eight inches of straw, salt hay cr double layer of burlap. Then place a three- - to layer of soil over the roots to prevent the wind from uncovering them. As the weather becomes colder, more protection will be needed to preer.t the roots from freezing. Ventilation must also be provided in order to allow moisture given The off by the roots to escape. ventilator may be a roil of straw or hay placed on top of the mound, and some growers use a short stove pipe cr a tile m both ends of the f-- i j j j j j u. if ! t - back-breaki- - -- .t Cost of Keeping Horse 1 mt r be i. If adcrtel ty tte tf. ' :rr-- fe( axrjr - recf. No. 2 Jaiat Er.!utwa Prcpasmr ss Aarsi x mm StrtiMi 1. ef Arurl Vll, f tbe Ctrut-lu- t oa Ktlil.rt ta GoTeraar's As piritiie Paaer ana tbe Killiar af can net ta. Crtaia Office. . , Sperin. n.Ai.. Be it retelte-by tkt Let slatar. at Iht Suif rf I Ufa, t lh:rtl ef aJi the concar-nn- f BrKbra elected ta eacb beat . to Tfcst it H pror-oseof Article VII. of the tbe S'j&vt erf Ctai, as ft. II. 1,200-podrt- T d by ari r r A Joint Resolution pent U Section Proposing an Amend' Article XII of I. M. H. Welling. Secretary of State oi Sut of U;iln- - do oertjfy thsl toregoing is a fu!U true and correct ing af Banks. Lbil.ty of eix institutional Amendrner u p, o Proposed by the regular session of tha leg s,..- - -- Ti-, - v . . - iriLi.i u, ir mW .1 uie b,o. islatur of IWi as the cam appear ei ken elected to each of tbe two bouses record in my office voting in favor thereof: I further that they will appear cr. EEC! ION l.-- That it Is proposed to the official certify ballot at the general election amend Section 18, Article XII, of the Constitution of the State of Utah, to that th Not. , 19.16. under th number and title herein designated. aame will read as follows : In witness whereof, I have hereunto at' SECTION IS. The Legislature may provide by law that the stockholder in every my hand and affixed tbe Great Sea! of th State of Utah, this 1st day of Sep corporation organised fcr banking tember, 193S. or the holders of any on or mor of th classes of stock issued by any such corporation, in addition to the amount of capital stock sviS5cr:bed and fully paid by them, shall be individually respons'bl for an additional amour.i not exceeding tbe amount of their stock in such corporation, Secretary of State. or the amount of their ttoek of any parti- - f 0.' horse'wiflino 1 Ete of Ltah, Stoctnolders ! j? the simplest form ' o; th,th, Kelat-- ;, " manuiac-tuie- d article made "from earth, or rather from clay, is a brick dried in the sun, and is probably one of the earliest of human inventions. Gold Element in Itself Gold is an element- in itself and does not contain any others. For most purposes, it is alloyed with other metals. Pure gold is worth the same, no matter what its source. Jefferson's Idea In 1800 Jefferson, in a letter to Burr, assumed that the being connected with the legislature, should be excluded from the cabinet. ; d d Vast Glaciers and Peaks Glacier Bay National Monument Should Remove Tusks j ; I Gen. Mite, the midget, was as Mai. Mite. His real r.ame v. Clarence Chesterfield Howerton He was born in' Salem, Oregon, in l.5? and measured 2 feet 2 inches. kr.;-.v- Learning From Yesterday Our yesterdays follow us; v:.ey constitute our life, and they give character and force and meaning to our present deeds. Meaning cf Word "Levant ' The word "Levant" is of Lat.n or French origin and means sunn.--e or east. It is applied ,to the countries bordering the; Eastera.Mediter: ean sea. an Garfield Won Ilehffetest ffors Ohio's President James A. Gar field graduated from Williams Col lege in Massachusetts in 1856 with the highest honors in his class. r. - Alaska, contains Tusks should be removed from male pigs that are to be kept for breeding, states a writer in Farmer. A boar with tusks is a potentially dangerous anima,' at all times. The best time to re-- ! move the tusks is when the are only a few days old. Cut pigs the teeth close to the gums, with nip-are made for this pur-- jI prs which Be careful not to injure the pose. funis, since an open wound fur- li'i.-an ideal place for disease. Wal-lace- 8,I'r "",',"ot- inr PWl I ; i la. '. New-Yorke- l, ry i.r ! j n Tbe Governor ahall r.fD-hii'JTrLb tbe ewastct cf the and distnrt offi-t-- r rate. w.v'.r". a.l te w h'if-off.trt are estabtttbed by thit or nhi-rmaty be created by ".trs zA cr eler-k- n law, ar.'i v. hoe hz for. bot otherwise f r v;i :i.c; . a is, .Liu j i-r recets cf the Ser.Lte, a scarry occ-- r in nornrs inu net to ex itrs! rrcTertr. Prc;-trr- y ary State or district offre. the GcverXD-' ptrs.-re&ail acme i.i pertca to dcfearge SS.CrO in T.lu, ewred by dijab' the dtrtiet therf-- f tirtij tbe text Bfee:;r,E who aerved in ary war in tbe m.itary E-tr.-- i of the United Statca or of the f lb? Sesa:, when be fhail noro;!iate acne mvicc-otuna-rriead person to fi. eu?b office. If the office of Utax tn-- i by tbe minor orjfasns of auch ptrsiat icay be ex- . Aad-tor! of Slate. Sate fm,MKlaWra sbail proTide bj uw for fwear; Th be racsied Treaiarer, or Attorney-Generannual tax sufficient witi other 03r.-e- . by deats. mitmaticn or o'henr;M, it ,htl be the duty of tbe Governor to fill tbe saifce cf rtnne. to defray tbe estimated ord:D-b- y ' for earb fca T expenses oi the state shall appointment, and tbe appoicte of payme tbe su e koM bu office ontil bis saet-essoPorpo shall be Te"- - For tb alerted and Qualified, as may be by laa Qe,t- - if tTy thre Sia- rrov.de for levying a tax annually, sjff,- provided. w c annual and to ;s? thf eEt I interest Th- - Sr-a6ECTION cf iste is ' oi uft twer.ty kercby cirertec! to tuba It this trcm fiE1 passajr cf the . amendment to the electors of the state at defct" amended ,b ,A tbe next general election in the sanber erlt:,! r 4, 1550.1 b SECTION 3. If adopted by the electors', SECTION I. The Secretary of Stat is to mt the proposed f th stav, this unesdaent shall take affect the first ds nf J.r,u.r r...t ajEenomeni cosuuiiea cerein to use eiec:( a determination by the Board of of the state in the next pvaera election in But Canvasser, of the result cf tb elec- the manner provided by law. SECTION 1. If adopted by th electors tion designated in Section I hereof. of the state, this amendment shall bav effect on the first day cf January next sucConstitutional Amendment ceeding a determination by the Board ef Stat Canvassers cf th result cf tha lc. No. 3 tion desij-nstein section Z hereof. A Joint Resolutiso Propasinc an Aairnd-ssen- t t Section I, af Article X. of tbe Constitntional Amendment Constitntios Kelatinr ta th State Baard No. 6 af Ed oration. (Superintendent of Public A Jo:nt Resolution Propcsmr; ta Amend lnstracUOB.) Section . VI af the Constitution Article Be it resolved ay the Legislature f the ef I'tah, Relating to Compensation ef Bute cf Utah, two-thiref all the memMembers af tb Lerislatore. bers elected to each boas concurring Be it resolved by the Legislator af the therein : Stat af Utah, two-thiref all tb men-bcrSECTION I. That it is proposed to elected ta each af tb twa becses amend Section f. cf Article X, of the n of the Sta-.- a of Utah, as follows: voting in favor thereof: EEC i ION 1. Triat it it proposed u SECTION 8. The genert! e:mrel and ic School Sv,tm amerd Section 9, Article VI. of the Cca- supervision of the thail be vested In a State Board of Educa- - I ""oaon of the Sut of Utah, as follows : tion, coiaittinf of rack, persons aa the! SECTION t. The member cf tbe Uture shall receive such per diem and mile- msy provide. Ke bbCTION 2. Tbe Secretary of Stat is ijegisiature may provide, not ei- kareby directed to submit this proposed eeeding eight dollars per day ..Dd tea cena amemteent to the electors of the state at per mile for tbe distance necessarily travtee cert general e;ect)on in the manner eled going to and returnir.g frcm the place of meeting on th most usual route, ani provided by law. SECTION J. If adopted by the eiectort thy shail receive no other pay or perof the state, this err.en ir-.eshall take ef- quisite. SECTION t. The Secretary of Stat Is fect the first day cf January next a determination by the Board of hereby directed to submit this proposed amendment to the electors of the state : Slate the cf result of tb electh next general election in th manner tion designated in Section t hereof. provided by law. SECTION 1. If ados ted by th 5etort Constitutional Amendment of the state, this amendment shall take effect tha first day of Jar.uary, 1S37. No. 4 SECTiON j, a tanl u: -- 3 t onl A a.Eid Seetaoxi CK;rjtjon ef LiUtar t. ei-t- CtinstitDtional Amendment thrreuB: SECTION 1. n u Frert u t eJtc-.io- n z'.rl in Section 2 jjl .' mi Slt. h et- X t bf tbtii l..e t c.t J That it EECTlOS prrf.jz to Article XIJ1. BertJon 1 of iLt of ti,e Stata of Utah, a -u at toe ceaeral cieetioB to li'i'.. tc for.oir, : AJ1 SECTION pro;r- In cf tf.t te. cot eirmyt urioer t tke or ucuer taj ast:.v:.sB, Utiu-ru to in taied be proportion thail prov.oed, lj iiw rte U av:eru:w-- d Ea-ijrf Siiie, propertj of tbe L'tited acaotJ B town. ei'.ie. toaEtiM. auvrict;, a,'.d pub.:, ncpal !'. eorpcrttioi: Rts tie btri!dinT tiereon usi wora.p cr ivt'.i for erUwr reiic'f itatwe parpoae. ar:d places of bur.i: rM or eoricrz-.- t reid or used for pnva V fit. s'tial! be txrmn irum taxauto. ::-- er ditrbes. canals. resn'cir r:rr.-.- i, plan-- , trarierjiisi.cn piintj, pumririjT .r acd fisBMS acd by utd p.'pea s: it ticjals or eairyort'.ions for :rrist:r : bT itein the ftata oried jcs ioc .sj or ccrrcrtu: tiJ, or tbe individjij r Uit. u :hfreo'. tha.l tot be atpi-- " fx- sha!J be owr.ed and Icr.F as ciufiveiy for surh parjoses. Pcer ; .ra. lizjes and orcer ;r. ;r- rxjer trsntsiitn foi cerirt:r.ff and oe'iver.rg t ct- :y P-r! V-'" i ' i HI l.lbk'H.l't iyvastj tu for irrii"-- c d j. urf'Ofre oo &t.o iz be exrartaHj frorc. Uts. f t'tafe. By t a prci-tr- t tioQ to lite extetl for euch purpose. Tnt eitrrr..Li iha l tpcroe to tbe benefit of the men of crdtr ucb rer.av.rj iir,-- to j,urr.;x-trie U pif latere my prescribe. Tr.e cf the iridient poor luiy t rem.tu: cr tt'tud at tucb t;rc and in tuc rr.ti: Tbe iis.-rels ixiy be provided by law. TiXi-tioprcviut for the ex rentier; frc-of hcm, bome5teaif , and pr:r. prrr.ld ti tat Imt X. 5 Prapaaiai ta UrnrU te)iva af tSa Ci-- i. 111U Sam tkrreta: -- u bjj Juki hrtxii uzmi pub-b-e allowance for pasture would reouirp about three tons .of hay aDd two and fomshalf tons of grain, such as equal Mayflower's Pure-BreDogs parts corn and Oats. Sorrfe allow-- ; The only two pure-breance is made for wastage for hay. dogs that came over on the Mayflower in 1G20 With hay at $10 per 'ton and were the cocker spaniel and the 'at $30 per ton the total year's grain reed mastiff. cost would be $105. Rural . m j d ca 305-da- y com-"pos- ed luke-war- ker tb i j:- - t. T&y I tt-- ti. , .KV1 tki pruiwri urirtisxL'. tm iuuJ cf Jarury nrt at ittt de'nrituvk'B or tr IBcf C.rviit'ru!i cf the horse at medium work will re-quire about one pound oi hay and one pound: of grain- - for each 1M pounds body ; weight. On this basis if figured oh .a feeding "basis for lirf feet tr 0 A od m.T.6 StCTlOV the same as in 1933 when pounds, smallest clip since 1929, was produced. Supply of wool available in United States in 1D36 will be much smaller than last year due to small carry-ove- r into current season, but'it is probable that mill consumption will also ' be smaller than last year. ' liier r Prospective world supplies of wool in 1936-3including production and stocks, probably will be le35 than for several years, say the bureau of agricultural economics. World production outside of Russia and China is expected to be about i ital! hot c o t m'trr km 'jerat at cf've !' f.fit snte acjritsed ttom-et- cf Tte StCTlOS' T C:rerji4 to tu'.ttu U.a ei!33E.t t.3 Ue t ff.crt of tte la ti tr Dti! refje-- i. last-draw- 3,278,-000,00- m -- Outlook for Wool fc i.t.l iier mf nl. raewdi. oooti a perform txh ia-.x- 20-co- " mi a i. Oaa af ta .''lata af 1'ta.k. AatiM u Uta Oaarml Ekatiaa ia ltM RtUts-- i t, Avrer. Tauueb af TuriU taiaatral af Vaiae. tuaiMat, acd tM Tas far taa Etate. cl ta, Be n reaatMd mf th cf all cm uu af Utah, twa-thiraf alrrua la tm Baaaa Baa all aieaiWrt af caca Haat earxcrriEt tJ !1or. Je f'.rat . f"j.-- oifie. fjT-rr- i A cow tester for the Palo Alto testing association, reports that the average test of the last milk drawn from a number of cows in different herds was 9.2 per cent. He points out that a half pound of such milk left in each cow at each milking would amount to 2.85 pounds of butterfat per month or about 57 pounds on a herd. Wallaces' Farmer. j mc4 A Jita7. A D 1M1. Tbe vif rrn Eirniivt tVtnn.c earxi tier res .3 t Ir arm! ef ef lb trrms p.r cent. j ttuit ml cau. a ContitntioBl ARendmem ii '5t!u mm ' effaet etit of mtAUt jost. Irti" Csidb. msa txll mi last-draw- ; ncTt bars Which is richer in butterfat, the n n milk or the from a cow? Or is there any difference? n milk is Invariably, the considerably richer. That is why it is so important to strip cows thoroughly at each milking. Incomplete milking not only tends to damage the future production of the cow but it also is very unprofitable. According to the dairy extension service at Iowa State college, convincing experiment along this line recently was conducted. A sample was taken of the first milk, then of the strippings and finally of the total milk mixed together. The first milk showed a butter fat test of 0.27 per cent. The strippings tested 6 per cent. The composite test for the entire milking was approximately 3 counter-charge- ef Mabcjr ua Last Drawn Milk Richer, Is "NVhy Stripping Pays i . cartjoe, af usm vi Erst-draw- tar tour effc fca Cabbage, too, may be successfully stored m the held. Pull the plants up ty ir.e roots and place tem on the ground upside down so that the roots extend upward. From three to ten rows of cabbages may be placed in one trench. In tr,e three-rosystem, two heads are placed alongside each other with the heads of the .third row between and above the other two rows. When storing six rows in one trench, place the cabbages in three rows together on the ground, two rows on top of these and a third row on top of the second layer, forming a pyramid. Then cover the cabbage with burlap or a thin layer cf salt hay or straw and add soil as for storing root crops. clas-ificati- if , Atuwj-Of:-- L of Audits. U tM triff " rt u. tu fiat tor uiMr irandd If &Pfrod 6ECTIOS I. mcvnu of Ar- t- etCTlO.H l. Tt ba.J eraiurt cf Gctiw. mound. .. tie ui tfc : at eii 1M Setr&Mn to cKta ttu tRvtwt ta mm puaimMt M required t t fee mtttjmctrj4 to tsooa ml ttm AmSm mt tbr Best .j allt rtW mimm- - mi ' my five-inc- h x TU! 1. at Cwntau: t-.- tfij u U . liur. ! &er-.-K ed x Ink. ml . SfcCTlO.S root such g t-.- j n ttCnOK X. imtid JftZZTu - AeW ML W l cmotim at. tw i Term. rh lwitL a O'f ifapwunw" ta4 Dcur d S V. Ey r.crr-- nt t, Well-Draine- lotion Fascist revolutionmiles from the out- d Field Not Do Needed; Dig a Trer.cn. Simple, t: :srs. Commurists arid Anarchists among tr.e supporters of tre national government opportunity to quar-le- l among themselves. Thousands upon thousands on both sides have lost their lives Indeed :n the lack of unity on cn the firing line, have been executed like so many cattle, or have both Sides l.es the only real hope of from starvation in times of siege. Atrocities have been a comprcrn.se in the civil war. As 'committed upon religious, educational and Civilian institutions a matter cf fart it is extremely doubtful that the doctrir.es cf either world. which have rocked the sde that might emerge victorious AH this has beer. hsppesiEg in would be beneficial to the nation. cf philosophies of g ovem-rr.e- many cf the business men &nd in- ' As long as either side is confident the which have begun to assume dustrial holdir.g classes. that it has enough unity and power importance in the world only in the in Spiri there has been to win regardless of the cost m life However, lart decade or two. The LoyaLs: r.o hunaraz&t:on cf industry to the nd ces miction is a srer. ftvemmer.t supporters, headed by point reached in misy other coun- tne t t Will gc to the titter fcve-new premier, Francesco Largo schools end. Industrial tries hospitals, CataHero, are nominally Marxists and ether lr.st.tutior.s, which have All Europe is aware of the extnd Commur..sts. The insurgents Leer, developed ty rr.ar.y Arr.er.cari delicate situation tnat extremely are Fascists. co.'.ct-rr-s under General Franco for the benefit cf their ists with relation to outside aid for But the Spanish people are emoare not to be found in either faction in the Spanish civ.l tionalists. Most of them Lave not the employees, B .th worker and employer war. But General Franco, in a Spain. faintest idea what these theories of as obother each bri.liar.t merely regarded campaign, has now captured joverrT.er:t mean, arid care less. A jects for exp3o:tatior. which virtually makes it Eadaioz, as Loyalist accepts his classification t for the government of Fist. impossible the Sign Communist because he believes PorWhile f.ve years ago there was ?.!adrid to receive aid over the that if his government is successful. border. The capture of Iron te will be delivered from the penury Lttie or r.o hatred of class for class tuguese an closed important point of entry outbreak of nd oppression which has been his evident in Spam. for any help that might have been forthcoming over the French border. Wuh the fall of San Stbasnan, the Loyalists lost practically the entire Atlantic seaboard. And the irs- surger.ts alio hold Morocco, the Ba learic Isles and the Canary Isles. Portugal Takes a Walk. Premier Blj.m of France, with the 1 aid of Great Britain, has succeeded s in establishing an agreement among the major European powers not to interfere in any way in the Spanish incident, especially net to render assistance to either warring faction. Yet, it appears from all reports cer: " . , tain that somehow both Loyalists, ' ' , 1 . and Insurgents have been receiving materials of war from some outside sources. Russia aroused the alarm and the disapproval of the other nations when she openly charged that Germany, Italy and Portugal had been aiding the cause of General Franco, in direct violation of the treaty of non - intervention. Stalin made it The March on Toledo by Genera! Granco'i Insurgent Army. clear that the Soviet would, if this outside aid to the insurgents conbeen must have the present trouble lot. An Insurgent accepts his tinued, feel perfectly free to come as a Fascist for the same a long time brewing. Today class to the assistance of the Commureason, or to keep himself from get feeling is so intense that, as one nists of the national government in ting shot as a Communist at the distinguished correspondent put it, Madrid. The Russians gave names, hands of the rebels who seem des- - "in many parts of Spain to wear a dates and locations. tined to emerge as victors in the collar or a tie, or for a woman to This resulted in a walkout on the wear a hat may be inviting a bulcivil war. of the committee for non- meeting let." Half Nation Illiterate. intervention, by the Portuguese del Visible demonstration of this Not that General Franco's army class hatred is the challenging Com- egate, who declared that his coundoes not have plenty of work ahead munist sign the clenched fist. Ev- try had been affronted. The Italian ambassador, Signor of it before it can really claim en tiny children, carted about the s Spain. There are important cities streets in trucks, are taught to give Grandi, opened up of the same nature against the Ruswhich have not yet fallen. After the to the along also naming names and dates Madrid there are Barcelona, Bilbao the sign And if bystanders the latter do not sians, way. and locations said to be Involved in and Valencia. Barcelona, a city of return it, it may lead to serious the supply of war materials to the a million souls, has virtually consequences. Madrid government by the Soviet. shelved all other industry in the As I have said above, in the exreal to produce bullets, airplanes citement and emotion of all this stir The Russians defended their acts and other implements of war. If of class against class, reason and on the premises that the ships which Caballero should find a way of com- - education have been subjugated to Grandi had named carried only carbining the Loyalist strength that an alarming degree. Spanish lit- goes of food, upon which there is lies principally in these large cities, erature production is at a stand- no limitation. Germany denied that his government might hold out for still. The only good reading obtain- she had any part in giving aid to side. tome time. able in the language is the old either in succeeds But if the premier Investigation Will Be Slow. classics. This is taken by many as binding his legions together in a sol- - a sign of the increasing, rather than It seems probable now that the id front, it will not be by links of ' decreasing, illiteracy of the general committee will demand investigaMarxist or Communist argument. public. tion of the Russian charges. The Half the citizens of the country can Under the present regime it be-- move is led by Lord Plymouth of neither read nor write. They are elemental, emotional. Their civili- ration has lagged behind. Literayi.--. rfz....,r. , ture has in a few years slipped back --1 over centuries of what progress it x i, x may have once claimed. There are thousands upon Bands of Spanish villages which are not accessible by road, which have " no water supply. Half of the pop' fc II l-i', .... i ulation makes its living directly from :. the land, by the crudest of methods. el Average earnings are hardly more kind to the poorest than enough buy of food. Generation after generation, they have grown up to the same kind of existence. These are the kind of people who are doing the actual fighting in the civil war. Are they fighting for ideals of government? Most of them 1 rhave no more idea of their physip. . cal location in the world's geography than they have of television. Republican Reform Falls Short. By the millions, these people have for generations slaved at .'.-5labor to the profit of rich ...'..: landlords not even present on the interwhit one not and : properties,, These Two Women and a Man Lived Through the Terrible Siege of the ested jin' the welfare of the tillersAlcazar at Toledo. ; aaiHC icyuunv. Of WQlT UCIUS. Bur)r'tbem that the lands would be came apparent riht, the arrnysas Great Britain, whose government is ' the landlords and given sdon to become only the strong arm vitally interested in checking the takn-qcourse of any "international 'dis. to them," aji. they cpuld have the o tCornmtmisrn,' wielded ' unmerciin revenge upon the Upper agreements over'the Spanish case, profits. fully When the"rrepubTlc was ushered cia'sses. Officers of the regular which, it holds, is entirely local to in,-i- t began sorjoe reforms, on the, army had been dismissed and that countrjnl'fend heed, not draw, all land; but was unable to supply the stubbed. In 1932, Manuel Azana of Europe jnt'0 another mortal conequiphad retired some 18,000 officers on flict. peasants with the funds and ment necessary to work the farms pay, only to take this "pay away Britain has another-- interest. at a profit, and the situation was from thousands of them at a" later Madrid charges that the forces little impwexL In fact jn some date, because of his suspicion that, which captured the island of Ivizia cases peasants were driven; to work they were to beconte. involved in a ,in Hhe Balearic group were in. the city factories at starvation Fascist revolt. That was th match primarily of Italians. Britthe tinder. ain would certainly not be pleased wages. that lighted with the prospect cf Benito MussoThe coming of the revolution was Both Sides Lack Unity. lini coming into power in such a loactually welcomed by certain. oLthe Fascists and officers The army cation. . business men and industrial emconducted old Re- .the .capitalistic class the For of decided to back up has France Spain. ployers so-- " "their revolt under the of Britain in its demands of an investipublican regime had not been as a smart commander leadership comexpertly hard upon the industrial workers gation. The irony of it all is that petent to take advrrtage of the do- any investigation which takes place upon the small farmers. toInstead, mestic weaknesses of the National- will probably be so long drawn out it was the worker who was blame ist enerait His campaign has been that ;eneral Franco will have won thera Mmo.of for strikes and riots, of speed the war before it is witnout any justification. The Azana slow but sure. His lack completed. Social- has given" many 0 Western Newspaper I'num. persecuted had actually Republic to.-- Cutatil". kmtaimfl 1 Communist, Fascist Ideals Are Filmv to Illiterate General Populace; Thevre Concerned Onlv With Delivery From Oppression. By WILLIAM C. UTLEY S THIS is being written, the army cf the ists is closirg in on Madrid, less than 20 skirts of the Spanish capital. Constitutional Amendments s' of glaciers and 1,820 ice-cover- square miles peaks. One of Man's Worst Habits One of man's worst habits, one that shuts him off most 'from under standing his fellow man. is the habit of judging. Meaninjr of Economy Economy is a method of inercsjs- mg the means of happiness; when made an end, it is waste. Attaining IdeaJ Humanity is. fortified that the' ideal goal is by the very longing for Was The Pheraoh was the Sun-Go- d man form. One Schooner There is record of but one : masted schooner ever berg the Thomas W. Lawron. Sun-Go- d of ancient Egypt appearing in hu- The Gift of Speech !i is silver, silence is golden; human, silence is divine, '' Seven-Maste- d Spain I. arte Spain is t:.-.- ' t' count nes o; L.ui". ii :: Goal in its belief unattainable it. |