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Show THE TAGE SIX The A Herald-Journ- HERALD-JOURNA- LOGAN, UTAH, MONDAY, JUNE L, Newspaper Scripps-Canfiel- d 75 West -- By Williams WITH JIM MARSHALL Afternoon Every Week-daCenter atreet, Logan, Utah, by y Published at 932. OUT OUR WAY Sitting Atop the World al 1 C. Cm he Valley Newspaper Entered as second-clas- s N. Gunnar Rasimison, president. matter at the Subscription price in poutoffioe, Logan, Utah, under the art of March 3, 1879 Cache Valley by mail, 12.50 the year in advance, by ( arner $3 50 a year in advance or 40c the month. Outside Car he Valley, by mini $5 no the year. San Francisco, Chicago, Gilman, Niooll & Kuthman, Special Representatives New York, Boston and Detroit. R. YV. MARTIN, Adv. Mgr. orris PETERSON. Munuging Editor Co., We have been reading a book about Mongolia and it seems that over there about of the entire population consists of -a. n as or priests these priests mooa about nothing - tak-- i doing practically mg what they want amt ruling by superstition s of the the other people supports them- - but anyy who one isn't a lives in dire poverty and - because there are unwelcome simply isn't enough wealth in the average family to support them one-thir- d ; Proclaim Liberty throughout the land" ! two-third- IUJT WHY SOAK ANYBODY? Cache Uowdy, folks! A few year ago we were all trying to live on the income of the year af- ter next. Now were trying to live on the income of the year before last. A machine has just been perfected that will amplify a sound 10,000 times. But what this world needs at the present time is an amplifier for our incomes. WHOM W HO IN CONGRESS Today we take pleasure in introOswalt! K. ducing Congressman terseotch, But great - hearted statesman, who has just Introduced a bill to fishing. pressman terseotch prohibit Con But point out that t h ousands of amateur fishermen, - stretching their arms to I n d leate the great length of their catches, dislocate their shoulders every year. . news item says that hundreds actors will tour Europe this summer. Ah, hams across the sea! A of American .... POME Etiquette hint We quote It with zest; The thinner the soup, The cleaner the vest e (i In a banquet talk last week. King George said that the American people "speak the tongue of Shakespeare and Milton. ' You aedOit, pal. well-to-d- o a bicycle. . . Thy evening: did guttle a hum! with, comimumled of raw beef and onion, and it a ever I guttled, Mivory : , ABIGAIL APPLESAUCE Many a who thinks his wife Is a little clingln vine finds not later that she is bride-groo- ' . 1 poison- A Chicago man was arrested for stealing 125 bathtubs. Gosh, he must have been going to manufacture an awful lot of home-mad- e gin! SEZ: m Ivy. . -- Medical specialists estimate that there are 10,000 diseases to which human flesh is heir, not Including the backbones of Jello that congressmen suffer from. PARTING i I SHOTS If youre not home by six I youll get n cold dinner. We were not at all surprised that the bathtub thief "made a clean breast of It" to the police. HUMAN FOR PERMANENT WAVE OPERATORS Umg live the kink!" New York's out put of garhuge, is about 5,000,0ti0 tons a yeur. Not including plays and novels of course. it is estimated, I i Lll Gee Oec has contracted a aerlous optical defect from workpuzzles. One eye ing cross-wor- d travels vertically and he other horizontally. Slack off on the jib sheet! FOOLED FIREMEN TRURO, Mass., June 4. tl'Rt Tne fire department here recently responded to an alarm for (Lord's Day.) Lav long alied, what was believed to be a forest reading In the puhlick prints of fire, but later proved to he the the wild doing of the Younger inoon. tinged a dull red. rising on Generation, how more youths do the horizon. steal petrol buggies . and stage holdups; and Lord! what we are A new process has been perfectdoming to, I know not, for Lord! basic color of well I ean remember when the ed to make the "of the 'community wa kept Portland cement tan Instead of youth if ram erime by a truant officer on Kray. YE DIARY Rounding The This ia the second of three stories by a western financial authority, explaining in lucid manner his belief that we are past the crisis of the depression. This newspaper, while not necessarily agreeing with the conclusions, public presents the series a an expert view of the most vital question of the day. It is written so that it ean be understood by anyone. EDITORS NOTE: CHAPTER TWO I told you of the Great Scare of February, Yesterday 1932 only a few weeks ago. I told you how you and a lot of other Americans drew 4,000,000,000 out of the bfyfks, bringing down prices of every tiling and almost Vtvfecking the country. Now Ill tell you what was done. Although Im a hanker; Ill try to make it plain. The job to he done was to restore confidence in hanks, and get prices started upward again. Restoring confidence is a swell phrase. All it means is that we want you to trust us with your money again. Some of you will he a long time doing that and 1 dont blame you. After the sorry career of many hanks recently, we must win your confidence. Rankers Need Confidence, Too On the other hand, we hankers must have confidence ourselves in the future of America, and lend money to the building'. Theres the null of it: Where do we get the money, now that you have withdrawn so much? Well, the federal reserve system is trying to do that. do , Here's how: The reserve, using its cash, is buying about 100,0(10,000 worth of government bonds and notes every week, from banks and anyone v. ho lias them. It pays cash at maiket rates, The Result of Eond Buying What does this do? When we read this- - we grew very indignant at the igliorunt and wondered why Mongolians the poor dubs didn't throw away their superstition - und put all the lumas to work - and stop supporting them - and get onto some sound economic basis and then we happened to remember that "federal government" which is our American xtute now .supports about one religion man out of seven in this enlightened nation and is supporting more und more each year . - - . - In Mongolia if anything goes wrong or the crops fail or somebody fads to make enough profit from the sale of a herd of horse- s- they all run around to a lamasary manned by an expensive staff of priests and the priests promise that everything wd! be oke in this country-wh- en anything goes wrong or a shipping concern falls to pay 27 per cent or a railroad can't meet bond interest runs around to and Washington everything will be oke everybody Washington promises In Mongolia- - they nave been doing this for years -- without any tangible result but they still keep paying foi it -- even though it impoverishes the country and makes it almost impossible for an average man to live decently in this country we haven't been at it so long but we mula tiply our federal priesthood great deal faster and il won't be long now before about one man in three belongs to the sacred order. Often we have the notion to train the Heir to be a bureaucrat so that he may sit in a nice swivel chair and despise allyouse guys and draw a nice salary for doing nothing whatever - since the nation is po set on g having hordes, of federal priests to make incantations and think up new regulations it seems a shame not, to take advantage of the idiosymicrasy ,. Many writers ..Cited that InLISTEN: If want of dians, because superstitious to discover what, this you, country's fear, would not disturb the to be we wake going graph or buildings m which tele- - up -- go rend a hook about 'Mongraph instruments were housed. and learn, . ., golia 'Hie writers were mistaken. Many instances were recorded in diaries of those on the ground ut the time, which showed that the Indians clipped and broke the wires, burned the poles, ranANNUAL RUlsn IS . sacked the offices. For a time they tried chopping UNDER WAY F4V the poles, but this meant too KTKAM BERRY J AM BY RUTH, ADAMSON much hard work. lor a time Now comes the annual rush for they tried burning them, waulfell until over, draging they strawberry jam formulas. And if the weather is clear and ging the wires with Jtjiem, but this meant too long u wait, warm, strawberry sun preserves They found the speediest way will he in the making. was to loop lariats over the wires The recipes for these and othei and gallop away, tearing the wires jams are given with the sugover the entire countryside. gestion that they he clipped amt Although it wax easy to make tiled repairs, the savages always upratNtrawlierry Sun Preserve ed their dest ructions. G cups small . berries, about 2 pounds, 4 pounds selected berries, 4 pounds sugar, 2 tablespoons VOTING MACHINES lemon juice. Select ripe, solid berries, wash HARRISBURG. Pa, June 4. .!h voters used 2,:99 and cap. Crush 6 cups of smullei Pennsylvania voting machines iu the spring pri- berries, for 3 minutes, stirring al There maries of 1932, the xtute election the time, then strain. There are 8,30(1 .should be about 2 cups juice. bureau reported. add the To this juice, sugar and election districts in the state. heat slowly, until it is entirely Of the 30.000 students enrolled at dissolved. Drop large berries into n the University of Paris, France, this syrup and allow ti simmer for 3 to 5 minutes. Drain about 2000 are Americans. Our Own West . tike-un!e- ss HomeService I r spl too NUVKX.CJ 'r' berries from syrup, and place them carefully, about an inch apart, on enamel-war- e or shallow pans china platters. Until Fairly Thick Boil the syrup for about 10 minutes to a temperature of 105 degrees C., or until it is fairly thick Remove the scum. Add the lemon juice. Pour the syrup, in a thin layer over the pans or platters. Cover with window glass, propped up gbout a quarter of an inch so as to allow air to circulate over the fruit. Place the pans of preserves in the sun, for two or three days, or until the syrup has formed a jelly. After each day s sunning, turn the berries over and take them into the house before the dew falls. Without reheating, put the jellied preserves into hot, sterilized glasses, cover the top with paraffin, label and store in a cool, dry place. Strawberry-Pineappl- e Jam 2 2 cups crushed strawberries, cups crushed pineapple, 7 cups sugar, a cup commercial pectin. To prepare fruit, crush completely or grind about 1 quart berries. Cut fine or iully ripe grind I medium fully ripe pineapple or 1 No. 2 eau rushed pineapple. Measure sugar and prepared a large ly;Ulf, mix wen, fruitjnlo to a full rolling boll over and nrini; hottest fire. Stir constantly before and while boiling. Boil hard 1 minute. Remove from fire and tir in pectin. Then stir and sun y turns for just 5 minutes to cool slightly, to prevent flouting trait. Hour quickly. Iliiaffin hot jam at once. If hiiiiarh-Slraberry Jam 2 quarts rhubarb, cut in i inch I1- pieces, quarts sugar, 1 quart itrawhernes Cover the rhuhnrh with n of the sugar. Let it stand for n hour nr so. Crush berries and tux hem with the remaining su gar, then coinhine with the Heat slowly until tne sugar x dissolved Increase the heat and cook quickly, stirring frequent Cook for iy to prevent burning. about 30 minutes, or until fairly thick. Pour into hot sterilized Sirs, cover with paraffin, seal and .tore in a cool, dry pluoe. ior-ie- n I rhu-nar- Spotlighting Hollywood By Llewellyn who found this one when . she was correcting papers. and Lincon went to the Fox theater and got shot." Science News Miller . . HOLLYWOOD Nothing is unexpected in Hollywood, hut lots For inof things sound strange. stance, instead of using a wax figure to represent a girl, the other day thev used a girl to r e present a rVITirtt eeesrrv- wax figure. It b a p p ened when shooting "D o c t o r X . they arners- Nation- - The al. Despite the fact that radium is worth $2,0)0,000 for one single ounce, there is little or no profit in producing it. order to obtain that many hundred tons of ore must be treated with expensive chemicals. There are only a few places in the world radium may be tained. Formerly the main source was the cainotite mines of Colo-v- v rado and Utah. Since, ores jn the Belgian Congo have United the States superseded fields. Scientists are able to detect the ores presence of radium-bearineasily with electrical devices. The electrical effects of radium's radiations have their own characteristics. At present the world's largest owner of any single radium supply is New York state. hard-sorte- d high-grad- e d plot ves e v o around a ser- tes of experi-- 1 ments which doctor RADIO FOR DEAF makes to determine radio A device that ti.insrmts t of a g u i and phonograph music to deaf pargroup of sons has been demonstrated bean o. v, an. u arc suspected of Academy of fore the National committing some mysterious murScience by Dr. Fredetick Bedell, of ders. It operates Twenty-on- e One of his experiments involved per cent of the deaf Cornell University. persons in Germany were victims through teeth or bones of the thg use of figure. I( yas of to represent a beautiful girl who scarlet fever" head had been slain. The studio went ahead and had the wax figure made. But, when AW.VAV.V.VAV.W...W.W.V. they started to shoot with the hot Technicolor lights trained on the scene, the wax gave up. So it was necessary to find a beautiful girl who could give a good imitation of a wax figure, which is a more difficult tiling to do than you would imagine. The search was lung, hui finally they dsicovered that Katharine Ritchey, girl, conic, hold her eyes 0ieil for 83 seconds without winking. Not only that, she could hold her breath for a few neeonds long- - r 1 g the 1 the peo-e-- aax 2B IPponndl OF YOUR TABLE Wonderful i ll K will do. what a stage Irain- - History with the modern slant: It was a Kansas City sehool , IS LOGAN to Los Angeles V . Corner--- ? well-kno- ju-,- lama-usuall- America M'fins to lie getting into a nitwit argument .souk the koi nr the rich will) concerning whether t new taxes. Financial papers anil magazines piint solemn warnings against, stinking the rich. It is the rieli who furnish employment, points out idie magazine. Oh, yes? Well, if that is so, why are not the rich furnishing employment NOW, when labor and the cost of everything is ihenpei than it has been for years? And why are the hanks complaining that rich business men will not borrow money because they cannot make profitable use of it, as the American Rankers association asserts) Of course wealth cannot make profitable use of more money unless the rest of the country has money to sjiend. And if wealth cannot make use of what money it has, why not distribute that money around among the rest of us, and see what that would do? All the wealthy are convinced they are rich because they are smarter than anyone else and so they would soon get all the surplus wealth hack again. What are they afraid of? Of course it isnt the rich who furnish employment; it is the great middle class and the buying power of that class that determines how many people work in this nation. Somebody said the other day that we needed a great new industry in this country anil added that the most needed industry was one that would create ten million new consumers for American products. Wise observation. In other words, we need fewer wealthy people and The way were going, were more people. getting more wealthy persons and fewer people in comfortable circumstances. Rut about this soaking business: Why soak anybody) We have nothing against the rich; no desire to strip them of their wealth. What we want to see, if possible, is more people with plenty to live on, plenty to spend. If the country spent less time wondering about soaking people or classes, and more time discovering how to save them, wed get along faster. Dl'VlB MOTHERS Speaking about autoists running over babir. there is another side to the argument I saw something the other day that needs airing As a driver I have for 25 year bent backward dodging kids in the street. As a father 1 have taught my babies to use discretion when playing on the street. I suppo-.- e this comes from the old daysvihen I was raised alongside a railroad track and was early in life ti, lined not to go to sleep between the t an engine tails, because doesnt stop when it gets going Here is what I saw in town the other day: In a quiet neighborhood I was driving slowly, and in the middle of the street Suddenly, right under the wheels, ti baby on a velocipede. I stopped, and the baby roasted past in safety. Now that little kid appeared from now lu re I stopped the car and went bark to investigate the phenomenon There Weis a house built on a hill; the concrete entrance to the gLruge was hidden by a wall; the babv was coasting from the guruge nut into the middle of the street, and the babv was onto the middle of the .street, without any warning to the motorist, onto it in a split second I felt like going to the back door and telling that fool mother u few things, but I did not. That baby has been coasting into the midst of traffic for months, and only by the grace of God has it escaped a very messy death, and the mother, who drives a car, has never turned a hand to help her baby escape death She would be if some very anguished truck smemed ton, her baby boy, nod she would rea murderer A i gard tile driver us a matter of fact, the mother would be the murderer, and she would have absolutely no alibi I see a lot of this sort of thing. Roller skates down the center of a boulevard is another indication murderous-mindeof parents; maybe only manslaughter, hut the as is dead kill poor just Occasionally I discover a dtirn fule motorist, but generally speaking. the drivers of automobiles are cautious and expert and have children of their own. But everywhere I drive I discover smart aleck kids running across the highway before a truck: walking in the middle of the boulevard; pretending to fall under an auto: turning bicycles suddenly before t I ever car; the only .spanking gave son was for pulling a trick like that Highways are NOT playgrounds ti.ich the baby that one TELEPHONE $2.55 j After 8:30P.M. Only By A Well Known Western Banker $1.40 Felt Terribly Nervous' Station - to - station rates. See rate page in your directory for other rates. . always melancholy and Fagged out blue. She should take Lydia E. Pink-ham- 's Vegetable Compound. Ira tonic action builds up the system. Try it. Beautiful Silver t Is Essential First, it puts cash into the hanks. This makes the banker feel good. It gives confidence to the depositor, wli n le cones to learn that his bank has cash to meet ' a d maud for money. The latest figures for May show that deposits ARE ! Instead of irreisiig The trend has been reversed; . mi. ey going out of the banks, its coming in. 'i hen what happens) Bankers Must Make Money Well, a hanker is in business to make money, and the : ay be ean make money is by lending money. The only S ' he reserve he more the piles money rm.c posits gets, this reserve is useless unless its working. up- - T I VThere is a lot of Dry Cleaning can So he ha k r, ml quite so Scared, starts to look J art u d for ways io invest these idle funds. He IS doing Jibe dene in your own home at very small?1 t ;nd lor the first time in months, loans and invest-- 5cost. In the past this has been dangerous"" Is by Imnks are INCREASING. --"with Naptha Gas for cleaning NOW A h u k with surplus funds MUST lend them or invest out must more it it funds .ore Ti.e i. has, the :!k pay ' J i.i i'H'st. It tai.t invest in short term government pabicqure the rale is too low. And if interest rates are C in,, lowered much, people draw out money and invest it elseThe Safe Dry Cleaning Solvent 'a where. removes the danger and makes it pos- - IS Bank Deposits Climb Again So that, whether lie likes it or not. the banker just has idble to clean in your home without en-j- i to take his courage and his money in his two hands and the lives of the household get that money working. Money working means men "dangering woiking, always. Bring your can. We have the exclusive" In four weeks of the reserve systems buying of bonds 'sale of Safekleen. bank deimsits in commercial banks increased about a quarter of a billion. This new money goes to pay off loans made to the banks by reserve banks, or it goes toiBB build up cash reserves. Tomorrow I'll try to explain how this building up of rash reset ves, in the past, lias ALWAYS resulted in het-'- a ter times. m B M ifi (Lumiuueu I union uw) if B iBe Safe and Save On Dry Cleaning i 5 !; that -- m I No table can look right without nice silverware. It costs but little to get new and beautiful silver now. See the new 29 PIECE SET Including Viande kniVCs and forks, 12 teaspoons,; guaranteed 25 years. Stainless steel knives STlfSoOSet ! M -- iff Complete With Tray The New Viande Knife and Fork in Several Patterns at No Extra Charge! Set This New Silverware & The New Shape Viande m |