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Show rr ' w v i tv rw,wrhtMrir r th i rf'ftTvm THE n E It A PAGE FOUR The D - JOU i Herald-Journ- al Newspaper A L Afternoon Every Week-da- y Published at 79 West Center street, Logan, Utah, by Cache Valley Newspaper Entered as second-clas- s matter at the Co. N. Guanar Rasmuson, president. 1873. Subscription price In pnstoffire, Logan, Utah,12 under the actIn of March 3. 50 the year advance, by carrier 13 50 a year In adCache Valley by mail, vance or 40c the month. Outside Cache Valley, by mail $5 00 the year. Gilman, Nicoll & Ruthman, Special Representatives San Francisco, Chirago, New York, Boston and Detroit. OTTIS PETERSON, Managing Editor R. w! MARTIN, Adv. Mgr. K N A L, TUESDAY, JULY LOGAN, UTAH. 1 9 3 2. Elva Saunders. Mrs. Rae Merrill Mrs. Edna Lewis. A nice him boon was served. Mr. and Mrs. Marion Snow h.r. gone on a trip to Manti and sou They expect to r,. Miss Wauneta Peterson spent them Utah the Fourth of July at Bear Har- gone about 3 weeks. bor at Brigham City where she attended the motor boat races as STARRED (HICKS the guest of Miss Evelyn Jensen of Salt Lake City. ALTOONA, Pa. July 12 d p, Miss Vera Robinson of Salt at Two bantam chicks starved t Lake City spent the week-en- d the J L. Robinson home, return- death because they were unable ing to Salt Lake Sunday night. to eat as a pigeon does from the was born on mouth of the mother. The bantam A new daughter hatched by a pigcmi Saturday to Mr. and Mrs. S. Ris eggs were Mrs. Christensen along with a number of pigeon Christensen. eggs. The mother pigeon ac urdc d at a Logan hospital. Dr. and Mrs. K. W. Merrill and her mixed brood the same treati(h her bill feeding all family of Salt Lake City spent ment, but the at Bear Lake. They The pigeons thrived, last week-en- d visited relatives here on their chicks, unable to take food from return. Miss Beth Merrill accom- the birds mouth, died. panied them on their trip to Bear Lake. Mrs. Lavern Robinson of the Cove Primary stake board wenttheto ward Sunday to reorganize Primary there Mrs Elva Allen was sustained as president, with Mrs Geneva Hendricks and Mrs. Mary Hendricks as counselors Mr. and Mrs. Niels Eskelsen spoilt last week visiting in Salt Lake City and Midvale with their sons. Leroy and Ned Eskelsen and (amities. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Niveson left Thursday on a two weeks' trip to their former home in Alton, Kansas Mr and Mrs. Roy Albiston are the proud parents of a daughter born on Saturday. Mrs. Bullen was hostess to the Utopia ciub on Wednesday 't he evening was spent ev, nmg at bridge, at which Mrs. Eva Christensen won high score honors - - - 411-and Mrs J W. Pulsipher the Special guests were prire Mrs Pulsipher, Miss Gertie JohnMrs. son, Mrs. Stanley P.rown, .. OUT OUR WAY Richmond "Proclaim Liberty throughout the land c PARTY HEROES To anyone who finds national political conventions in'ercjt-Ing- , there must occasionally come the melancholy thought that the great party heroes the patron saints, so to speak, whose names must always be mentioned reverently m the keynote addresses -- get a whole lot more devotion from their parties after they are dead than while they are alive Each party has its great heroes, and each party always drags out their images at its conventions. The Republicans, of course, specialize In Abraham Lincoln, and lately, they have begun to enshrine Theodore Rcjosevolt in an adjacent niche. The Democrats start with Thomas Jefferson, pause to bend the knee before the figure of Andrew Jackson ami then drop the rest rf Heir wreaths at the feel of Woodrow Wilson. But a good many of those men got something less than complete devotion from their followers during life. Lincoln, for example, Is on a pedestal now. But the dawn of A large section was al1885 found his party bitterly divided. most incredibly hostile to him. If Booth had not killed him. Lincoln and not Johnson would have felt the wrath of the "radicals" in the late '60s; his attempts to save the south from the horrors of the reconstruction period would have brought to him the blind hostility of that section of his party whic h ultimately tried to throw Johnson out of office. Roosevelt, likewise, was not always the idol of his party, he was roundly snubbed in 1912, and he had to break the paity in half and help elect Wilson to win back his place in the GO I councils. And Wilson, before his public career ended, sat at the head of a divided party. Not all of the votes that killed the treaty of Versailles In the U. S. Senate came from Republicans; and In the campaign of 1920 there were plenty of party leaders who Not found it Inexpedient to do battle for Wilsonian doctrines until after his death did his party really enshrine him. -The moral of all this? Perhaps there isn't any unless it is that the great party leaders always are fighters, and that the battles they start cannot be forgotten until the leaders themselves are in their graves. Cache 4 wrj( .SrffS Rumor 'J , Howdy, husbands! If your wife Is avay on a vacation, the easiest way to wash dishes is to spread them out on the lawn and turn the hose on them. Oi wait for a rain. . There Is no use talking, the worst feature of a vacation is the s other fellow's you are expected to rave over. snap-shot- OWN OLYMPIC CANDIDATES OUP. We are forwarding the entry of Miss Tesuie Toothpick to the Olympic (lame ; com- mittee today. Miss holds Tooth pick recJthn world's urd for longwlnd-r- d telephoning, having talked ov-a telephono lino fo.' 1.1 hours and 1 minutes, an all Ome record lor this event tf four-part- y homer and Babie Brew do prepare dinnee. with grate skill anil dar-- i ing. they compounding a dish con- -j of corned beef, onion, poIf all the recent collcgo gradu- listing eelerv ates are going to be bond sales- tatoes,anilchopped tomato c .lmi Am' Lord ! men and insurance solicitors, what "Kgs d It do I also ("mt tifi a think ENTER THE SNAKE will wa do for office boys? hunk of autoiixii.it tic- ,cccl on lo riing, albeit do ancient tc For 15 years I never locked a BLISS say naught of this to the children, door in these hills. I do not mean The baseball of heaven lest, heaven help me, they do that I did not lock a door at fan dreamed, make me wash the dishes! night. Nobody ever does that out Anc' le r. golden frame here. I mean that when I went to Ho saw- the welcome sign hung Television was used last week town for two weeks I left all the out: to broadcast stock market quota- doors unlocked and the windows "No Bain Because of Game. tions The pictures were so clear open: and in 15 years I never spectators could see a quotation missed even a match. of arc drop a fourth of a point. Hundreds Those days are gone The reprospectors flocking to Alaska, which reminds pression is on. A fello v cannot us that a prospector is a man who Hail to modern progress! It leave a hoe hanging on the gate; doesn't know whether he is three has made it possible for a man to he cannot leave an ax two yards feet from a million dollars or a get indigestion and a remedy for from the backyard chopping block: he cannot leave his car around the million feet from three dollars. it at the same drugstore. bend without having the gasoline Toudle-doo- . drained. ABIGAIL Recently I was in twn two APPLESAUCE days and when I returned I found . SEZt the coil from the spray gone; the DUAL FISH CAUGHT A woman ha i battery gone; a $12 two view uv r, taken from the work12. N. Y.. rORT JERVIS, July vecret either Its bench;l , a hand drill and all the l!i if a George Rlffenburg caught r lur, worth keep-lsunfish the other day h.lts 8t.oln from the upper shack; it s too oi while fishing in the Neversink. three fish rods, two reels; a brace good to keep. And to prove his is no fish story, and bits and chisels and various he has deposited the freak In a hand tools to a value of $50, and all this was done by fellows who Gashouse Gus says th only pall of water. The fishs mouths had spotted my departure and and shut alternately one thing that seems to disorganize open who knew exactly where every may grab for a morsel of last chanty is an application for some mouthwhile good tool was the other remains Inof It No native-borhill billy would active. do that sort of thing; this stuff THE GOOD OLD DAZE was stolen to be sold, and no junk On, mt, do you was disturbed. Remember, brother, CLAIMS DISTINCTION That sort of experience makes When men spoke thus a fellow feel considerable like Adam cet s have anothei MOUNT WASHINGTON, N. H, felt when the snake walked into July 12. (PPi Deputy Sheriff Her-eb- Eden. Sure, snakes walked in One time friend husband know3 G. Leach, of Litchfield, bethose Snakes still have legs better than to protest against lieves he is the only muu who ever and days. hips and all that sort of thing wiping dishes Is when the dinner entered the second degree of in the embryo, just as you have a guests are his wife's relatives. atop a mountain. Celebrating tall and gill slits, my beloved the 300th anniversary of Washington's birth, the ceremony was The delight of these hills has YE DIARY held by Washington Lodge, No. been simplicity; clean solitude; a 61, on the summit of Mount Washnatural innocent state where no Thys daye, my guidwtfe being ington, highest peak in New Eng- - evil thing enters and where there Little land in the countrie, Is nothing to jar on a fellow, if he can manage to get along with himself Report made to the Bank Commissioner of the State of Utah of the No hill billy dares lie to another condition of hill billy; they are too mutually The fellow who Interdependent. THE WELLSVILLU STATE BANK Located at Wellsville, in the county of Cache. State of Utah, at the will not help his neighbor in time of stress as well move out might close of business on the 30th day of June, 1932. pronto, because he doesn't belong RESOURCES in the hills, and there will come Loans and Discounts ..... $ 90,552 60 a time when he will be needing Stocks, Bonds and Securities, etc. 6,094 45 help powerful bad and it won't 2,500 00 be available. Banking House Furniture and Fixtures 1,000 00 A neighbor might easily move Due from Other Banks 9,816 98 into your shark and eat your Cash Items 492.40 $ grub and use up your firewood; Gold 00 1,145 but he would leave more wood Silver . 615 36 than he burned, stacked neatly 00 behind the stove, and he would 1,294 Currency pay in kind, in money or in labor Total Cash on Hand 3,446 76 for every ounce of food his necessities forced him to take from But a thief killing la too mild $112,410 79 TOTAL, a punishment, LIABILITIES $ 20,000 oo your store. Capital Stock Paid in Surplus Fund 7,50000 Undivided Profits 818 79 $ Ic.ird-hoile- - I - ' hot-sh- two-mou- . -- n it Mas-i- ns I New English Home Strictly Modern For Sale or Trade at Sacri fice all-c- Phone W jer Heres More About Prohibition at Crossroads (Continued From Page One) elf is a.s old as Ameiica, despite the- fact that the early inhabitants were largely men who liked their liquor strong and knew how to hold it By the middle of the 19th century this movement had given birth to a definite movement foi the enactment of prohibitory laws Maine went dry first of all, and by 1855 no fewer than 12 states had done likewise All of these backslid, however, snd shortly after the Civil War. Maine was left alone as the nation's solitary dry state. There was another rise of prohibition spirit in 1880, however, when Kansas wrote a prohibition law Into its constitution, and several more state's went dry in the decade following Again, though, there was backsliding, and by 19o5 America contained just three dry states -- Maiqe, Kansas and North Dakota. The cause of prohibition had been making progress, nevertheless. In 1869 the Prohibition Party, never really influential but significant, just-- the same, of a slow"nnibition sentiment. ly rising was organized. In 1871 the much more important Woman's Christian Temperance Union came into being; and In 1893, in the First Congregational Church of Ober-liO, wa-- born the League The league was founded originally to support a local optnn law. hut two years later it was organizing on a national scale, with a convention at Washington In a very short time It was making its influence felt in no uncertain fashion. -- - addi-I'cn- Anti-Saloo- n VOWF.H IN POLITICS The league was primarily an organisation supported by the churches; but its officials with their brilliant general counsel, Wayne B Whel'T soon demonstrated that thv knew as much about practical politics as any men in the country, f9?9l meant nothing t Party labt-i-. It to the league every applied candidate for office the single te J he wet or dry? If he wa wet, it called on its members and followers to go to the polls and sock him; if he was dry. it demanded, and got. his support. At Westerville, O, it established its haJquarters, with a printing plant. In the decade and a half following 1999 that plant had printed for distribution to th'' country more than ii al o.p'uts wre shrewd State prohibition iws were the When the league goal at first. elehiated its 2U'h birthday, in 1913, the list of dry stites had increased to nine, and Congress had been induced to pass the Wehb Kenyon act, pledging the to help dry federal states stop import. itiniis of liquor from wet territory adj lining In that year the league held a jubilee meeting at Columbus, O and announced that from that date it would drive straight for a Two federd prohcb'tion iw. weeks later 4000 men and women paraded i'l Washington in a demon d ration The prohibition league busied itself in congressional elections, and in 19) t sent no fewer than 50,0' hi speaker- - into the congressional fights. beMr Wheeler later fore the senate that it was not at for whole that time, unusual, carloads of prohibition freight propaganda to hi- - shipped from Westerville in one day. AH of this had its effect A fact not generally recalled today is that in the fall of )91i a majority of the House of Rr presen tatives voted for a prohibition amendment To lie sure, amendment got no farther; but the indication of the leagues growing power, n nd ot the growth of prohibPon sentiment, enough for any oosr rver Nevertheless, those most opposed to prohibition paid little nttmtinn to it The organised liquor trade certainly failed n see the h on the wall Unbiased observer hive stated hat the liquor trade in a very to real way helped bring prohibiJt permitted tion on it, elf the open saloon to be nine a festering sore iu municipal life when it could rry hive ompeIed a clean-uIt allowed the very phrase, 'liquor trade, to become weighted with unpleasant connohen it tried to fight the tations League it used tactics tha wore not only pi lOilly ineffective but highly repellent. In every wny it alienated those who Im defended it and ought strengthened the cause of iU foes Not until 1916 did the U. S I . introduce the 18th amendment in Congress The fart that a war was on nrohahly helned the league In the first place, there was no undeniable need to conserve the cereals which were in the manufacture of liquor. Second, the attention of the country at large was focused on France instead of on prohibition Third, many of the most promleaders had inent undeniably Gerni.ini" names which helped to identify prohibition inthe popular mind as a war meau-- Mit t 'Anti-Saloo- Tomorrow Night, July 13 at the n v fldl 1 th!') g ea-il- Anti-Sdoo- n war-tim- Sponsored By Logan Post No. 7 The Best Dance ofthe Season Horns - Hats - Fun Makers - Carnival FREE iiiati6f i i,,iV6,iiVi,i,i,i,ViV,iViViVV,liViVi,V,iVi,iiViV THE EASIEST WAY TO KALSOMINE lets, Butter Prices ance Nevertheless, the signs of the time had been dear before th e nation entered the war; and the that passed the 18th Congas amendment had been elected before the war. The 18th amendment passed the Senate on Aug. 1, 1917 On Dee 17 of (lie same year it pamed the House. Incidentally. J. Thomas Heflin of Alabama then a and later famous as a hone-drsenator, spoke and voted t entrust it 8 On Jan 1918. the amend ment got its first ratification - by the Mississippi legislature On Jan 1, 1019 it got its 36 h enough put it into the Constitution the Nebraska by legislature, Twelve other states ratified it later. the last one being New Jcr- which apnnved the amend moot on March 7, 1922 Meanwrhile in September of 1918 Congress had passed a law e providing for prohibition. This law went ioto effect on 1, 1919. after the country' July had been at peace for more than half a year; hut "real prohibition lfi 1920 began on Jan w'hon the 18th amendment went into effect. It remains only t note that the oi stead acA passed bv Congress on Sept 4. 19(9. wai vetoed bv President Wilson on Oct 27 of the same vear and was passed over th veto on 'he following d?v. NEXT The beginning of enforcement, the rise of Al Capone and other gangster chiefs from the eaiv money" that flowed from bootleg liouor. 114.000.000 leaf- nearly 2,0.000 books, more than ft.ooo.ooo pamphlets, upwards of 2.300.000 placards and approximately UVT.OOO.Ono copies of weekly and monthly magazines. And the leagues war chest wa: kept full In its first 30 years of life it spent fully $3ro.000 to further the cause of prohibition When the fight was at its hottest it was spending $2,500,000 a year Nor was this money wasted The league knew precisely what it wanted and how to get it, lU propangandists were able, its association wake up and Net Undivided Profits c 818.79 - San Francisco butter today, 92 offer to clean house By that time Reserve for Depreciation 2,531 91 SAN FRANCISCO, July 12. tT it was too late. The tide was ris$ 31.299 39 Deposits Subject to Check score 18. ing or perhaps it would be hot Cashier's Checks 158.60 ter to say that it was going out too fast The stable door was be Total Demand Deposits $8.90 31,457 99 ing locked not only after the horv TO BOISE AND RETTRN Tim" Certificates 18.226 03 had been stolen but after he had t7.30 21,865.68 Savings Deposits been spirited away to the other TO NAMPA ANI) RETLRN side of the country. Total Time Deposits ILLY 13TH 40,091.71 Other Bills Payable 10,000 00 From Logan via Oregon Short CONGRESS 10.39 Line. Tickets good in coaches or GOES DRV Cash Over chair cars, limited for return to) By the time the United States TOTAL, $112,110.79 home destination before midnight entered the World War, in 1917 STATE OF UTAH. County of Cache. July ISth. Ask local agent for 26 states had gone dry', and the n further details. R. A. Leishman, being first duly sworn according to law, deposes League was ready to and says that he is Cashier of the above named I.u.h that the above and foregoing report contains a full, true and correct statement ef the condition of the said bank at the close of business on the 30th day of June, 1932. R. A. LEISHMAN, Cashier, Correct Attest; a WILFORD L. ANDERSEN, D. A. KERR, SAM P. RIGGS, . All standard train and roach fares from Cache County to Box ' Directors. Elder and Weber and points on the Bamberger Electric are 1932. 2nd to me sworn before Subscribed and this day of July, materially reduced, standard round trip train and coach fares NORMAN G. ALLAN. from Cache County to alt points on the U.IC. sre reduced and Public. with an extension to thirty days on return limit of tickets. (Seal) Notary My commission expires 24th day of February, 1935. Reduced fares become effective July 10 on Utah intra-stattrafSTATE OF UTAH. Office of Bank Commissioner. fic and Aug. 10 on inter-stat- e traffic. L W. H. Hadlock, Bank Commissioner of the State of Utah, do hereby certify that the foregoing is a full, true and correct copy of the statement of the above named company, filed in my office this 7th day of July, la32. W. H. HADLOCK, Bank Commissioner. s USE KING It Spreads Easier When hJLfmA DRINK SUMMER is King if is very fo easy spread and splashes very liltle. USE KING A big, frosty gloss of Iced Tree Tea nothing so It Makes cooling, so satisfying on hot summerdays. Blended of choicest leaves, Tree Tea has a finer more pleasing flavor. It is highest It Donft Show Laps al- - lowed (o jell before using, USE KING After i is all dry ran go hack and patch up fhe spots The you missed. laps will not show. Instructions you TO THE INEXPERIENCED USE KING hate never done such a job before dont he nervous. It is easy to If vou IT follow the simple directions to mix King Wall Finish, and it is very easy to make a Rood looking job with King. DOES NOT RUIJ OFF You can lean Anyone Can Do It Be Sure to Buy King! a against it safely. Good quality at lowest cost. (An M . J . B Product) USE KING Looking Reduced Fares Job THE COLORS PLEASE When you are done ton ran look with It is easy to sell King because the colors please everyone! pride at he job if e 1 yon use King Wall The Utah Idaho Central Railroad Co. Finish. riii hi r iV I 1 ft l V,VAV.V.VoV.V.V.V.WAW.V.V.V.V.V-V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V- . |