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Show & 'S1' 3 iTti'iTaiftfMfrtiiitfffnr'-i-i - mimbs THE PAGE TWO. HERALD-JOURNA- LOGAN, UTAn, L TlESDAY, Hgahmi MARCH hmsLi Htumtim ruflfti-- ' 5fT; Pll i' Proclaim Liberty Tliru All the Land " Tlie It.ihei ty Bell. Member United Press, Service. Western Features of Newspapers. Fntercil as seeoml i lass at I,o pm, Ft. ill, nailer the matter nt the postoffic Act of Congress o Maxell 3, IsTD. 111 OUR EBIEND JOHN Broadcast injr ndTiorat ion is comlui ting' a THE r.ritishaddresses called 'America Speaks, in wliicli of it presents American speakers ia short ae to tin British empire. On the list of speakers are Harold Ickes, Glenn Frank, Myron Tavlor, John L. Lewis, Dorothy Thompson, Harry Hopkins, llerliert Hoover and others. These sjii'eches cannot lie heard in America, unless one wants to pick them up short wave from London. They will not he mi the American net oiks. Darn decent of the British, we say, to pive our American orators a chance to dump a lot of their excess verbiage on the foreign market. We must remember that when the reciprocal trade tnaty comes up for v UNBUTTERED PARSNIPS mood Gilbert Seldes, author and critic, sixike IN merry recently to the Gourmet society in New York in this wise : Have you considered humiliating people or annoying people merely by serving them food? Have you thought of the 20 different shades of expression that you can achieve through the food you give your guests? He suggested serving crunchy foods, food hard to chew or hard to chase around the plate, or delicate food with a strong cabbage flavor fanned in from the kitchen, food accompanied by delicious odors from or second-rat- e the kitchen. And, of course, he added, you can always give tin) little food, which is complete revenge in itself. And, of course, we add, you can always fail to invite guests you feel that way toward, which will save yourself a lot of useless bother and the possible waste of a lot of perfectly good food. But then, Mr. Seldes was only out for a talk. A DESIGN FOR MARRIAGE THE Homer Cummingses of Washington, D. C., are known as a happily married couple. Homer Gumming is, as everyone knows, the attorney general of the United States. A little biographical item from Washington says that Airs. Cummings has declined abide by the ruler for capital hostesses. She has no social secretary, dislikes large dinners, invites her guests by personal notes. Her principal purpose, she has said, is making Homer Cummings happy. " The wi.-- old apostle, Paul, advising the Corinthians, said : She that is married . . . careth how she may please her husband. But he said also: He that is married careth . . . how he may please his wife. Th6 Cummingses undoubtedly work together at being happy, each seeking happiness through making the other happy. And there is the jwrfect formula for marital happiness, and contentment. e Answer to Previous Puzzle HORIZONTAL Pictured continent. City near Cape of Capital- 'ot 16 Tree. in Africa. Sharp. 32 35 18 Sun personi- fied. 19 Four and five 20 Pitcher. 41 Wine vessel. 22 Diagonal. 24 Collected a 44 Paradise. reserve. 46 2000 pounds. 27 Affected with 48 Debates. ' anemia. Bronze. ' Age. Stir. Possesses. To bow. 3Q To tip. 37 Constellation. 38 Exists. 39 Dogma. 40 Movers truck 31 32 33 34 35 52 Barley sirup. 36 Aurora. River in Egypt. Five and five. Strong taste. 39 VERTICAL d 40 1 To query. . Page. 2 Enemy. 3 Eggs of fishes. 42 Wise men. 43 Region. 4 Interior. Left-han- 45 46 Dormitory.' Powder 7 Arabian. ingredient. 47 Auditory. 8 Kind of 49 Diamond. dagger. 50 Sea eagle. are found on 9 Intent. this continent 10 Kimono sash. 51 Turf. 53 Self. 11 Was 59 A northern 54 Alleged force. torious. on 57 Exclamation. this continent 12 Born. 54 S molding. 55 Bellows. 56 Talkative. s 58 Many 5 Performed, 6 Citizen. IS V RAY NELSON find Unit the most vital nrt i t ins of the lower eeononiic group with wliic Ii I have been in eimtait. me decent housing conditions and adequate niedu al tare." That is the answer ,n Bowlder county wclfate agent in. ole last evening to the question: "In your v. oik, what (to you tiud the ta-people need most of all?" onditions lie cut housing meda al t are. and adequate He want on to lelate instamcs where bundles of eight or ten one lived finlpcd together shat ks, in many or ot these there was no fmntmie uliatevir smm times the t rud-- i st ot i mill apt ions .set veil as Mine mm h i bans or tonics home was dc.x, iibed m tins (olumn some two months ago limb r tile heading "Soul vVith-ou- t A Cham c' I At one plate lie visited ill sm lal uidfile i ehildien ate their soup tiom inftic .sins w tide they sii on old five guilt n ml cans till li ved from some junk-pile- . During the fall, he flies otteu swarmed said, monad the food, Lovered the babys faee, and stunned the walls and rollings. At several places of this type, there were no toilet facilities, and one family even used common surface water for culinary purposes. Undesirable moral and social effects often abound in homes of such poverty and squalor. In one family there were ten children and the parents living in two rooms. Four children slept to a bed, and the bedroom for all was one. Two girls of 17 and 15 years undressed e and slept and awakened in the room as did two boys of 11 and 13. No individual privacy whatever. Thus poor housing conditions, so far as this caseworker fojnd it. provided one of the greatest problems that face our society. And that is right here In the Utah Utopia, the happy valleys of the Mormons. We have such conditions among us, and the picture is pretty much the same the entire country over. I cx-s- W, and has received other material almost daily from the justice department, treasury, Federal Trade Commission and the Sei unties and Exchange Commission. His chief collaborator is Solicitor $43,000,000. General Robert Jackson, who, as division last head of the anti-truCAREFUL INVESTORS year, started prosecution of the A careful study of the credit sitd uation of the country, made by giant Aluminum company and charges against a number of New Deal economists; indicates that this is one of the factors re- other big iirms which have not yet been filed. tarding recession recovery. The message will call for no This study shows that there has action legislatives developed a channelization of loans, comjirehcnsive or concentration of money in gov- at this session. It will recommend d seauthorizing a special study of ernment bonds and to formulate a new code curities, so that funds are not suf- monopoly anti-trulaws, for submission ficiently available lor ordinary bus- of to the new congress that convenes iness risks. This channelization of loans first next January. There are three reastarted in 1917 with the Liberty sons behind this strategy: First, the president is still up in Loan campaign, when big investors began putting their niony in the air on a program of his own; second, even lfg he had one, it is government bonds anct This was the first time now too late in the session to that the purchase of government spring it; and finally, he wants to bonds took place on any large scale throw the monopoly issues into this elections ot in the entire history of the country. year's congressional The tendency has continued ever force the candidates to go on re- FOR THE MEXt FEW YOU GUYS ARE GOINIC TO CRAWL UNDER SOME ROCKS AND PIPE Jt. $800,-OlH- y-1 FV p. ' J gilt-edge- st X w signed the WORLD, 111 SPRING, I93A two-iom- n mrjm'-- since. Today there are three of investors. Here they gether with the channels nicy invest: 1. Wealthy individuals ' - Behind the Scenes in Washington fix-u- helter-skelte- Those who have been through the process will understand the hyphens in the preceding parahaven t graph. And those whofavor the been through it hut idea are urged to go into general the matter carefully. pop-the-- hip. ' misses I hope Mine. this particular piece of mine. She has gone with me- - lately somewhat reluetanaly. I've noticed ventures relating several into to one -- r, And then many on sc their existence, and say they should he allowed to die off! When humanity as a whole becomes sit base as to discoid its right- - than gilt-edg- with Rodney Dutches il relrig-crator- rather regarding the future. Result is that private industry can't get large amounts of money from the banks. Only way money can be raised, therefore, is through a stock or bond issue, which can only be done by large firms. 3. The insurance companies put their money chiefly in U. S. securie ties, bonds, and mortgages.. They are restricted by the insurance laws which forbid speculative risks, and the result is that some of the larger companies have as much as $u,000,(xjo lying idle, drawing no interest. With insurance one of the chief means of saving today, this ties up a tremendous amount of money. kje? easet- Y Glances At Our World il- have told commercial loans. This is partly because of the requirements of the Federal Reserve Board and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, partly because of uneasiness ter worth to Ins society or his government is not so great, but always that cannot be classed as his fault. Very often, that is the fault of the society that is condemning him We ,by our very repudiation of those social debts, these ungodly conditions whu'h we allow to ilourish, are responsible for their being. In the scramble (or prominence ill the ei oiionin' heavens, a certain per lent of the population lias been trampled downs, has been stripped of a chance to make a decent living, has been fin gotten socially, educationally. spiritually. Often these people are poor heeause they haven't as much i. alive ability as those higher than they which isn't their fault at all. and thev shouldn't be despised for it. That people are eteated equal is the falsest saving the ill English language Or again, it might be they have as much native ahility as the finest of business executives, hut the environment in which they live has clutched them and held them from getting above the muddy stream They aren't responsible, alone, for their environment conditions The American society in general is to blame for this 111 the iast hundred jears American society has allowed the industrial re id! licit to boom the American culture all out of balance and proiHirtiou. At the present time, there are eight million without employ ment which means at least 40 million are affected directly. Machines are in these men's places, and yet w e wouldn't like to destroy the machines for it would mean we wouldn't have such a high standard of liying. And none of us want to go without our automobiles, our radios, our nickel bread and our floor lamps and 'our leeless Hut the fact remains that industry has not been planned. It's been allowed to go and today we begin to look at the resu,ts interpreted in part by the extreme metry and dire need of many u ha lmpcued to 1m on the tail end in this game ot securities fix-up. And though she loves and admires this lakeside, pmey woods hi me ste.nl fully us ninth as I do, 1 honestly believe she is a little hit fed up with fixing tilings up I tins morning Whv. only heard' her telling a visitor til it "she" had just finished paintI sprang into ing the kitchen. action instantly, you may well believe, and showed the visitor exactly how much of the kitchen I had painted and she had paintThe iciling was exclusively ed mine, and a prettv fair represenAnd tation of the side walls. besides, could I helpd if I had to he doing some extra writingc just at theat time the kitchen pro-jewas its height? I mil definitely not complaining If my advam e estimates on the amount of "fixing" that would be of required wore u little short the mark, why I am no contractor and couldn't be expected to know everything And if someone gets tired waitjob ing for a certain painting ahead to be finished and goes a 1 in am engaged with it while typewriter battle, is that lay fault? Uaint-uweek Clean up. Fix-uyou inall year when houses that quire one of those old me so much fun to fix up p p lasts ha- - and ds fill responsibilities ni.inonos.s, then its voiy oc iso A WASHINGTON. year after opponents of Mr. Roosevelt's Supreme Court plan began their fateful attack before the Senate Judiciary committee, nothing is more obvious than the curious exchange of positions by the Court and Congress. Twelve months ago the President was believed to control Congress. But his legislative program had been persistently nullified by a majority of justices. Congress was liberal and the Court conservative. Today the positions of the judicial and legislative branches in relation to the executive are almost exactly reversed. The Court, with almost monotonous regularity, has been approving new deal laws ever since Roosevelt tossed And bombshell. famous the since the president made justiees of Senator Hugo Clack and Solicitor General Stanley Reed, the Court has had an unquestionable liberal majority. Congress, on the other hand, not only has stymied nearly all the Roosevelt program, but even has been going back to repeal or threaten legislative ground gained by the new deal prior to the 1936 it Most conspicuously, election. has discarded new deal taxation schemes. Behind the demand for the TVA investigation is much opposition to TVA itself and the feeling of many members that expenditure of hundreds of millions of dollars on such a project isn't justified. TVA may suffer. What Congress has done to the wage-hou- r proposal, the original seven reorgaeiat'on plan, the TVA's" idea and other F. D. R. proposals needs no repel it mil. Certain skeptical Tennesseeans arc suggesting that the recent hubbub over the question whether Chairman Sam 1. McKcynolds of the House Foreign Affairs committee would run for the Senate or stick to lus present job was largely designed to help Sam keep his present seat in the House. McKcynolds has opposition. Mr. Roosevelt, Secretary Hull, Speaker Bankhead and Majority Leader Sam Rtyburn all joined in unusually fervent appeals urging him to stay with the Foreign Affairs Committee on the general ground that the nation sorely neet.s linn there. MiReynolds has had the Roosevelt, Hull, Bankhead and Rayburn letters photostated for circulation with a statement of Tennesseeans that his first duty is to the people of his district. Since verbal appeals would pcrsonul have been more usual and at least as effective, the form and wording of the letters suggests they were written for public con- A good way to Howdy, folks! cross a street is to wear a necklace of electric light globes around neck. jour No motorist is going to take chances of getting a puncture by running over an electric light glolie. Spring poets rejoice that the world is again full of sunshine. So do awnBut that's nothing. ing manufacturers. MU) HOLLOW REPARTEE a very small town, isnt it? queried the stranger. Well, no, retorted Clem the town is plenty hig enough, hut there ain't many This is Mo-Sil- o, BRIGHT MOMENTS In Great Lives Charles (Chinese) Gordon, the great British general, who died It was ill l.xs5. never married. always thought that he had suffered an early disappointment in love, and it was known that for many years before Ins death he SOMEONE MUST LEND Result of this concentration of wealth in government bonds and securities is to leave money for private enterprise. Business initiative, lacking funds, begins to dry up. and this is one of the restraints affecting the country today. Furtnermore, it runs in a vicious circle. Less private initiative there is, less business there is for the government to tax. And the less taxes the government collects, the more money it has to borrow. The more money it borrows, the more it dries up the normal credit sources of business. That is the financial d on which the country is whirling today, and the big reason for the plan to get loans released to private business, through regional banks or otherwise. non-acti- 1,1-t- destructive termite is no Chut respector of personages, Justice Hughes recently discovered a horde of the insects in his house uud had to move to a hotel for several days while exterminators tackled them. . . . Members of are being bombarded congress with pleas from junior grade firemen and trainmen for legislation to require older workers to share their employment. The younger men claim that with rail work sharply redueed because of the recession, the veterans are hogging the available mileage and forcing the juniors to go on the relief rolls. . . Chairman Emory S. Land of the Maritime Commission walks several miles to work every morning, rain or shine. WELSV1LLEWARD TO GIVE OPERA The Wcllsville Second ward will its present operetta primary Make Believe Wednesday night at 8 o'clock in the ward recreation hall. Children taking part in the operetta are Beth Bailey, Lila Rae Clark, Laree Bailey, Anna Lou Bodily, Arda May Hubbard, Cleone Poppleton, , Bonnie Taylor, David Darley, Grover Jones, LeRoy Has-laGordel Brown, Jay Bankhead, Dick Seamons, Eldon Glenn, Kay Murray, Gene Maughan and a "Polly supporting cast. The jiresidenry, Melba Jones, Leora Parker and Alda Baldwin are general managers nad Gwennic Glenn is in charge of the music, LaVern Maughan will be the accompanist. Jane Glenn has charge of the speaking parts and Mary Baldwin the dancing, with all other officers assisting. The operetta is presented by permission of Raymond A. Hoffman company of Chicago. A small admission charge will be made. JOTS merry-go-roun- MONOPOLY MESSAGE No hint has emanated from Warm Springs, but one of the Li'I Gee Gee says she's glad principal jobs on which the presishe's small because precious ar- dent is working is hs ticles always come in small packon message monopoly. ages. He plans to complete the docuYeah, and so does poison. ment at the Georgia retreat so he can send it to congress within a "I never want to see a bar few days after his return to Washas again," declared the convict ington. of prison. they let him out Roosevelt took with him a mass too You've Teacher many put ill people JEZEBEL Half argel Half siren, ALL WOMAN! it. MODERN. WOMEN Ncd No! Suffer monthly pain folrlfl, nervou-- s strain, exposure anti delay due to or stmt lac cauaes. t'hwheeKera Diamond lit aod Rills arc effective, reliable and giveQuick Rtlnf Sold by all druaurwtn fur over 4 years. Aik lor IMITITOCTU 'TM BRAND" DIAMOND banana. A s in Little banana Homer Well, you know an easy one to slip on. is FAMOUS CAKES Io(iikI cake. Angel cake SUmiaeh nclie. 4 Gus is pretty disWhen he goes to a drirkiug party, lit always sets a But he sayi limit for himself lie he gets irtuxicatcd before Guslious couraged. re. u lies it. t resolute man cin accomplish almost anything, except keeping his hair from falling out. A r is this to be said in You don't of the automobile. There have to work for 10 minute every moinmg to force a bit between its teeth. i E DIAIIY nii" ta tail-4"'- '; T'c: niccS' we i5 tip-ko- e Si at ' , oooooooooooooooooooooooo Mighty wearie to bed. hut d he awakened hy a strange sound, which doth affright me vastly, I do allMit the. down sumption. with great lira very and Other Tennessee politicians whis- stairs, hardihood, a ml my blood, in all per that McRcynolds looked the truth, do run like iie, until I do senatorial situation over and de- discover that the noise Ih only cided the going would he better Cuthhcrt, the rat, stalking ucross in the congressional primary, esthe strings of Dame Brews guitar. pecially with such valuable camAnd so, mouthing fierce words, letters the as ammunition paign hack to IniI. provided. i for being will he wandering eveless in Gaza' The third reason why til' lower classes must have adi quale medical attention is that i .vili.aliim itself would soon regress, get weaker, and fade out if the ones who are having families were allowed to Hot cutty at least, tile lilt' off higher i lasses have not bothered themselves with having ilnldren It is unfoi tunate, of ionise that they haven't. So d we wisi; the race to he reptodm ed. we'd b.qter look to the breeders of the r ,i e There is the piohlem: Bitter housing conditions and mb ' piate medical care for the pooler isses of society What will the Aim Mean clvill.d ion do about it ? Our Cache of Humor ND I The A ernment MKKKY-GO-KO- to- They even keep large amounts of rash on hand. Only when they fear inflation do they buy stocks. 2. The bunks have now concentrated most of their money in gov- X-Repor- Another argument is the manitarian, which seems to be the greater and finer. If we ask ourselves. "What would Jesus Christ do or say to such a condition?", then immediately we see the finer purpose for providing medical care and assistance to the needy. It seems to me, that technically, one human being has as much right to life as another. Berhaps his are, in which their investment advisers to conserve what they have. They want to take no chances, even if they draw interest at only 2 per cent, or no interest at all. Afiaid of the future, they say they are willing to live on their capital. This class puts its money largely in securities anil triple-- selt-sam- hu- cord. big types bonds The second pressing necessity of theso unfortunate families and personally, I think we don t need to confine this necessity to those on relief - is adequate families medical care. A somewhat bitter statement was made the other day til regards doctoring the lower economic element: "Why should we doctor that kind This yeir I jumped the gun on of people? It would be better for Fix-u- p , Faint-up- , socioty and for the " nation if we'd the Clean-upall those hv doing let that type die off sloganers There are three arguments to things before they started their that contention: First, the individ-lU- annual spring song. who said it, failed to recognize If anyone sings only one verse of that chant to me in 1938 all that by letting disease breed which I need to do is to show him the among the imverty-strirke- n paddles form an alarmingly large per cent array of cans, hhushes, of the iHipulation of the country and painting cloths that still this For home. pmeywooiis we would make disease more pre- lakeside, talent so that he and his children theres more to come. Much more. would le more apt to all ietim For the sake of a boat landto it. The aim of (utilization is to ing, a marine view that is surely banish disease from the earth, unmatchable and a few other and thut would he iuqiossihlc if highly desirable features, we beit were allowed to flourish among came possessed of the poorer c lasses. of data pie-pare- MONTHS OR ELSE D sell $lt,oon,0on worth of stoi k, offering it first to stockholders. But ) the stockholders bought only Worth, leaving the underwriters stuck with the balance of over h AMD DOWN a at7" ntflnSffiTr tii from page one) (Continued y00 IU(S THE TREES ARE BURSTING INTO BLOOM AMD THE BIRDS ARE BEGINNING TO SING AMD THE FLOWERS ARE STARTING TO COME UP AND WE'RE GETTING" IMTO SOME NICE WEATHER NOW e Ozone. Africa. Egypt.17 15 21 You and I. 23 Data. 24 Desert in 25 To lacerate. 26 Bones. 28 Chief. 29 Unoccupied. 30 Valuable crop Good Hope. Early. 14 These They Need American Wire, NEA ami The Scrimps League Iferalil-.Ioiirna- 13 us 5 rents n copy. By mini, In Cache Valley, a viar, oat sale Ca he Valley, $5.00 a yeur. l!y carrier, 45 iciitx a month, $5.00 tt year. Price $t no will not assume financial responsibility for l The any errors which may appear in mlvei tisement.s published in its columns. In the-- e instances where the paper is at fault, it will rewhich the typographical print that part of the mlvi rtisc meat mistake occurs. 1 MERRY-GO-ROUN- HERALD-JOURNA- L afternoon by the On he Publish'd every week-daValiev Ni wspaper Co, 75 West Ci liter Street, Logan, Utah. 'i'eli'i'lione 50. iiSjffirfnjliffrf 1938. 29, WKI) LIKE TO HAT OUT A LITTLE ULTIMATUM, TOO The rafog S' 1 VTscpartor oVO out ! YYDILDNT Wv V, CV.shS1 cove lOVt5, TAKE A CHANCE! LOS ANGELES. March 28 il'.li 39, jobless, and despondent, made sure of death on the gas, slashed his He turned throat, slabbed himself 2K) limes with an ice pak, and hanged himself Tluoilure Cook. made up Ins mind never to lie was a very morose Stomach Bains man frequently wishing himself Sharp W hen he was in the Su- Lpsct My Whole System dt ,i.l. dan, he wrote hack home to a Says E. Hentges: "I tried a $1 25 bottle (3 weeks treatment) of Adla tnend "There is a Miss here, the nicest girl I've ever Tablets under your guarantee. Now nut, hut don t he afiaid, tile had marry AUTO SUPPLY AMD SERVICE STORES . S |