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Show n T,T ! t PAGE TWO. The THE Herald-Journa- II EPwALD-JOURNA- THOUGHTS Relief Plans for Little Business Paraded l Published every week day afternoon by the Cache Valley Newspaper Oo., 75 West Center Street, Logun, Utah. Telephone all departments 50. The Herald-Journdelivered by carrier 45 cents per month. By mail, In Cache Valley, $1 00 per year, $2 25 for 25 $1 for three six months, months, 50 cents one month; elsi where $5 00 per year. Entered as second-clas- s matter in the post office at Logan, Utah, under the act of congress, March 4, 1879. Proclaim Liberty through all the land. Liberty Bell. BV IKTEK F.DSOV Ucrahl Journal Washington Correspondent Nov. 1 Five WASHINGTON. impoitant suggestions to relieve the difficulties of small business firms and help spread defense production are being considered by the Defense Contract Service of ORM. now under the directorship of the phenomenal Floyd B. Od- -, lum. These re- - occur. mmendations written in pencil on scrap paper by Director co The power to tax is the power to destroy. Odium Those who are governed least are governed best. TIIOMAS JEFFERSON. I Peter 1 Effect smoked out and put in the record of Missouri On Youth Senator :13. "Wlmt effect is war hysteria ami of this emergency having on No seed shall perish which the soul hath sown John A. events our young people?" Nv niomls. Mrs. VV. W. Kit hards posed this question as a possible subject for the Logan Forum to discuss She suspected that wartimes, the fear that accompanies "these gnevous days," the spirit of conCapt. Hideo Hiraido isli mighty man with his tongue. flict, of defense economy, and of the he warrior Spokesman Japanese navy, speaks the general hysteria which has words. Every sentence is a battle. Every paragraph a camarisen are having a serious effect upon boys and girls who are paign. growing up amidst them. does not take a seer to discover that Captain Hiraide She feared, in fact, that not does not like the United States. He is all for the axis. He is only the nouls of youngsters, blit the very fibre of family life also all for action. He is weary of attempts to bring about and ideals of the home, are bea better political atmosphere between his country and ing pommeled by international America. He thinks the time for shooting has about arwar and all that accompanies it. CURE FOR AN ITCH it rived. He did not mince words. He allowed them to come out whole and with the peeling on. Said he: The Japanese navy is itching for action. . The reply would seem to be: The American navy has what it takes to scratch itch. U that GEORGE, PASS THE SHEARS! Six thousand hairdressers cant be wrong. And 6000 of them in convention assembled recently in New York passed a decree which means that milady will have to see the beauty parlor she patronizes strewn with long clippings from her cherished tresses. She may have taken months to let her hair grow to the right length. She may have spent many simoleons to have an expert give her just the right long hair-dcovering her ears. But now the inexorable 6000 have given this form of hair dressing its death warrant. They have heaped scorn upon this style. It is Hollywood shrubbery. It is like wet spaniel ears. It gives a woman a drippy look. No woman could brave these o : i : v epithets. , The locks will have to go. ' MURDER MOST FOUL Assassination at any time is a hideous crime that must be condemned by all right - thinking people. The men and women who grieve over the fate of France can understand the provocation, but cannot condone the killing of German army officers by desperate Frenchm' n, driven to frenzy by their nazi conquerors. .But the Hitler gangsters have committed a crime that is even greater than those committed against them. Every time a German army officer is assassinated, the Germans shoot at least 50 hostages. The victim i of their firing I squads have nothing to do with the crine that is being v? avenged. They are guilty only of being F enchmen. The death that is meted out to then is s'. f deliberate murder. It is without sanction of law or justice as civilized men understand it. It is under a code that dates back to tr era of the Vi Huns a term the followers of Hitler bitterly hate, but , "i. which they are doing .their utmost fully to earn. - : 1 ; - tf t HORIZONTAL H Depicted , insignia of the U. S. 'fh 'Army Corps. 7 Bodies. Implant deep. Pass up. Residents of Aran (Bib.j. , 18 Immerse. ga Stupid person ,14 16 17 21 BiUng emarks. 22 Send money in payment. 24 Most important. 25 Frozen water. 26 Argues. shi- - (abbr.). o development of normal life patterns possible under sueh i instances? Are philosophies of life formed a warped and unwholesome manner by youth who are by greed which is nn-pi.n- t, killing, lust and destruc. j i? Can The Golden Itule make a fighting ehance to survive if t le world believes, and practices, t le opposite? ill youth, baptized in thj social credo, "Do unto others before they do it to you, become n pugnaciou-- i hardened, cynical, painter. matter. publication. 40 Location. Listen to what Somerset Maugham, prominent present-da- y author, has to say about the future: Far be it from me to don the prophets mantle, hut I think It is clear that thpse young folk who are now taking the stage must look forward to economic changes that will transform civilization. They will1 not' know the easy,' sheltered life which makes many who were at their prime before the war look upon those years as did the survivors of the French Revolution when they look back on the Ancient Regime. "They will not know the "douceur de vivre.' We live now on the eve of great revolutions. I cannot doubt that the proletariat, increasingly conscious of its rights, will eventually seize power m one country after the other, and I never cease to marvel at the governing classes of today, rather than continue a vain struggle against these overwhelming forces, do not use every effort to train the masses for their future tasks so that when they are dispossessed their fate may be less cruel than thai which befell them in Russia. "A Russian exile of my acquaintance told me that when he lost his estates and his wealth, lie was overcome with despair; but at the end of a fortnight he regained h'j serenity and never stice gave a thought to what ho had been deprived of." special committee investigat- By DREW PEARSON and ROBERT S. ALLEN ger companies, the prime contractors. When proposals to expand any of these plants are made, ap- - proval should be given only when it is known there are no other idle plants available to do the job. 3 Creation of the foregoing two divisions would leave to the Defense Contract Service the intermediate field of 30,000 or more plants for whom there should be allocated an emergency pool of raw materials to keep these plants alivp until they can be converted to defense production. Gdlum believes that the supply of raw materials needed to keep these plants alive would not be great, but six months will be required to make the shift from civilian to defense production. 4 Provide for expansion or conversion of plants on defense work financing by- either a federal fund for loans or denational a ing through partial guarantee say fense. While the 20 per cent on private loans from program may commercial banks. The interest not be adopted rate on these guaranteed loans Edson in its' entirety, could be low the morthis does serve to Rhow how Od tality of such although may be financing lum is thinking about his Job. high and the overall loss of the The suggestion came to the Tru- conversion or expansion may man committee in rather unusual reach $25 million or $30 million fashion. Odium, recalled to make which will simply have to be a second appearance before the charged off as a defense expendiTruman committee, gave an hour's ture. testimony on the issue when Truf. Authorize army and navy to man asked for solutions saying advance money up. to 30 per cent It wras high time a little com- of the contract price on the mon sense was used in tackling signing of the contract. This would this situation. permit prime contractors to make his memorandum their plant expansion or converOdlurq with his rsjers in a thick, bat- sion as soon as the order was tered leather case overflowing in- placed, instead of making the conto a buntjle of papers wrapped in tractor borrow money for expanbutchers pa "cr and tied with a sion and wait for completion of Rtring. The suggestions had not delivery on his order to repay it. Now all this may be a good bit been typed but were merely roughed our for Odiums asso-t- o in the nature of thinking out A pieces. Whether 3 otild be carried out WASHINGTON nnt procedure was POT SHOTS m had not yet Half of the merchant ships hut when Sennow bring bui't in U, S. ator Truman offered to take reshipyards are of welded consponsibility for their presentation. struction. . . . One green Odium oroce-rV- d to read from his senate nage boy was , Inipenciled yellrw sheets. tiated by being sent for a bill stretcher. He fooled TWO PER f t.NT WOULD his tormentors and actually R CENT KEEP 10 rigged one up with rubber In summarv. Odium's ideas for bauds. . . . Because of dethe relief of small business boil fense activities, the governdown like thi:: ments purchase of office 1. Until Jime 30, 1942, sot aside supplies for the year will in a separate category firms emrun to more than $10 mil20 fewer than people. ploying lion. Normal purchases are These little companies are the $3 million. . . . John Thomas backbone of American industry, Tailor, American Legion lobsays Odium, and while it is difbyist Influential in nutting ficult to convert them to deover the soldiers bonus lege fense production, these 130,000 a islation, has been - through special sat-ipo- n. I' lit-t'- businesso" employ 10 per cent rkers. And to keen the tu .vi g 'ir for the next eight mi nths would take only 2 per cent of the available raw materials supply. 2. Plants that are catalogued by poarmy and navy as known or matential producers of defense terials should be left to .the sup- ervision of the armed services.These plants would be the bigi given colonel's commission and a in job army press relations f body starve. Who works for glory misses oft the goal! lt ho works for money coins his soul. Work for the works sake, then, and it may lie That these things shall be added unto thee! j Mu d price vise against the Willkie blast, or else tone it down drastically. Martin didn't demonstrate with Lambertson after the damage was done, but he had plenty to say to friends of the Kansas, who car-- I ned back a blunt admonition that he should have put "party interest abovv personal animus." Cleveland's Reform Candidate Obscured by the hot mayoralty fight in New York is another campaign in which Cleveland is about to elect a new "Fiorello La He is Judge Frank J. Guardia. Lausche, and be has several points common with the crusading in mayor of New York City. He was born of foreign parents Jugoslavs who migrated to Cleveland around 1890. (La Guardia was the son of an Italian who led an army band at Prescott, Arizona.) Unlike LaGuardia, Lausche is a democrat. But like La The price control bill was draft- Guardia, thousands of the oped by Price Administrator Leon posite party will vote for him. Henderson after weeks of careLausche has a Finally ful study, and turned over to the record for Judge uo Cleveland cleaning banking committee in July. The crime very similar to that of the had nothing on its Little Flower" InNew York City. committee docket, could have considered it The area which Lausche cleanbut recessed for a ed up was notorious for having immediately, could so bnvs the month instead, spawned and protected the Alvin go home to look over their poli- Karpls gang. This district was a tical fences. emporium of gambling and A later they drifted huge month crime, operated under the nose beand to back the job leisurely of the late Sheriff Martin L. gan a series of hearings that ODonnell, who died suddenly in Meandragged out until last the middle of Lausches housewhile inflation, only a threatening cleaning. shadow in July, became a grim Lausche, a common pleas court and rapidly snowballing reality. have ignored the In the wasted three months, judge, could gambling racket. Ma.y another price indexes have soared and Cleveland judge had looked the all sorts of economic, financial and other way Instead, L usche sent rehave comnlications social to word Sheriff OjJonnel that sulted including strikes. when his court moved into the King Labor He I its King Colton Meanwhile the banking com- gambling area, he was going to mittee stalled and here is the act. The racketeers laughed. So did inside reason. They wanted to the enforcement officers. Wherekite the price of farm products upon Lausche called a grand chiefly cotton, which they hoped to get up to 25 cents. jury, induced- two or three petty criminals, who already had been The maneuvering was made sent to jail, to spill the goods possible through an undercovonthe entire gang, and in a few er logrolling deal between comweeks Cleveland's gambling racmittee members from cotton ket had folded it3 tents and dedistricts and labor sections. These latter were afraid of a parted. ceiling on wages. There is no Judge Lausches campaign for wage ceiling in Henderson's bill, mayor also has been unique. He but there is Trong sentiment passed out strict orders that no for it and the laborites were campaign funds were to come from afraid such a curb may be the utility companies, the banks or written into the bill on the big business. In consequence some floor of congress. of his Democratic leaders have So with King Cotton scratch- threatened to bolt. Most of his two these funds have been raised in one ing King Labor's back, groups were sitting on legislation to ten dollar driblets, while lush terto a needed control $1.C00 checks were sent back to crucially rifying danger to the nation's the donors. internal stability. As a result of ail this. Lausche Finally, with the flood of anti- walked in the primaries with labor resentment over the coal one ofaway malvrities the strike, cotton congressmen are in history, andbiggest seems likely to definitely considering a modified poll a landslide of both Republiform of wage restriction, and the can and Democratic voles next price control bill is bing renort-e- d Tuesday. out of committee to congress. If so. it will mean that RooseThats the kind of lofty states- velt will an outstanding new manship bein'? displayed these Democratichave mayor to whom he can t oubied'davs in the congress of with pride as an offset to the United States, one of the few point free legislati.ve.,.bodies still func- the Hagues and the Kelleys, Senator Ed Johnson Sues tioning. department as contact man with congress. . . . Direct sales taxes now give the states 40 per cent of their billion total income. $4' , . . Increased liquor taxes passed on to consumers are exnected to increase sales of half-pinin states where this size is not prohibited to discourage use by minors. ts loud, but it has the merit of be ing a program to meet this sit-ve- deal r sings Gee Ahr delayed in committee; intro I mes-subut strike resentment row forces some plan for wage ceiling; reform candidate seems certain of election as Cleveland mayor; Joe Martin disapproves Lambertson's speech attacking W'illkle. WASHINGTO- N- Anierican'Furra Ed O'Neil, Bureau President speaking at Montgomery, Ala., recently, warned farmers that "inflation is a greater menace to them than to any other group." It was sound advice, and the farm leader might well have addressed it to the farm members of the house banking oommittee, wlo for more than three months have blocked action on the price control hill, designed to avert the inflation which the farmers fear. a w-e- - - Inner Republican Strife That fiery sneech against Wendell Willkie bv Republican Representative William P Lambert-so- n of Kansas was loudlv acclaim- Senator Ekl Tuesday Logan utlz, pods to select a a,, Tr 80 ' commissioner from a L, drHl cs men who were u from a f.eld of seh.td - a In other Cache several cities the citizens county See"Sln town officials from H 8njui competing eamiidat,s for those positions at "OBizat, ul)r tt; stituted primaries In itself the eleition mav a very important hanwn.n. yet it is of utmost m,p0M is an evidence that neniocri? lives m the Unit, q our forefathers H,d mid the battlefields of th, oy andi, New World Polls Still Name American Leaders Notwithstanding the tim,..s the unrest that J gps general today, we hold the power to h,,AA ly regdlated polls those who? serve us in polit t, c,i That is something that iSP entirely unknown at prL5 most other parts m thf Gripped in a death struggle, bloody battle fields most of V ope is too busy to hold elect? Kven when peace reigned. in most of these countries t; nothing more than a fare, Germany, for inst uue HitW troduced the t, allot provided only a "Yes vote i, favor. oting Privilege Should lie Guarded It seems that in times these, the citizens of the States should appreciate rights as citizens more than They should jealously g , privilege to go to the poll, select their government official, all elections, be they nty cour, state or national. They sfe Tt stated C ' 'H , the jure. u'( I it e an htf- chani Maudi ien chang to d 1 - Jeani to K powder fre 1 t with the id' .a x. it rou: fes, demonstrate that appreciation exercising that right. That u only way we will be had Kaudie T tain our democratic ernment free and manag' detai 1 1 one-wa- y before is then I d !, able to m,,, I km All system of untrammelA Without an active, alert grom, voters there can be no the larger the perctn, 'it mens who participat intelligently in tne election lerminatioi at :Jders, i better the government that nrevail. Election Activities Are Refreshing! Even though we may disagre, vehemently with those who pour, the tar out of those of our ot: city officials who seek it is most refreshing that s things can take place. That is something that ear happen in Germany. It is reports! for instance, that an influentia Nazi recently made a fiery apeec) against Hitler. The man should congratulated but, of course, ya couldn't dig him up just for W j i Dennjr. and the t on gel Prot 2jig. thoug that hac X 1 it but v nity h weeks o aelodram ted. papa arrived ; confusei repor uen isoeen d in iter, wi iCK DONT MISS BOB HAWK 8:00 P.M. KSL Johnson, Democrat, SUNDAY, NOV. 2nd keep cold ag -a turn iMdium MOO arsi tmiBHK weaitties si Stresses QWte plumed &! Uwd by Air Lin Pilots. chair. c TANK iTP.OITis Voo'lIooiTM'tdiiti When Justice Hilliard defends himself before the court he might read a opinion written by his colleague U. S. Judge Jimmy Allred of Texas, whb in a libel suit brought by Congressman Sweeney of Ohio, ruled: A public officer . . . cannot go about with his feelings on his sleeve. Public officials and candidates are legitimate subjects for news and comment. GUARANTEED FOREVER! THE JEWEL HAROLD BOX COMER TOUR WITS WITH SHARPEN AM IVHRU , k, g NEW POWERMASTER ENGINE- -1 NEW FLUID DRIVE with NEW AIRFOIL LIGHTS e NEW Simpli-Mati- c 1 5 Horsepower! Transmission! invisible by day! choices! PERSONALIZED INTERIORS 47 Division of geologic time (comb. foim). 48 Beverage. Adorned with stars. land. plant. Failure. Mussolinis dogma. 4 5 Flcctriiied particles. 42 Clan symbol. 44 Otherwise. 47 Son of Seth Kind of (Bib.). lettuce. 49 Spi ite. G 51 Skill, Preposition. 8 Pertaining to. 52 Road 9 59 South African 60 61 3 Decorate. Roman (abbr ). 10 A dance (abbr ). Rest house. Seit love. 13 Ve' e form 11 12 (pl.t. 3 (abbr.), Releience (abbr.). 54 Age. 55 Vale. 57 Each (abbr.). 5j Alternating current (abbr.). the joy of work not for larger more money or higher position. Its good advice for the other fellow. Work thou for pleasure! Sing or puint or cane The thing thou luvest, though the n eal.s, SALT LAKE CITY COME SEE DESOTO - e NEW VALUE engineered into the finest De Soto ever built! Heres Lasting Stylo Long Life Super Economy! STYLED TO STAND OUT-BU- ILT TO STAND UP A $200,000 modernlzolion program assures you of the best in the West! Spacious rooms in the heart of Salt AUD VOU TQY.YL5 V10UH) 7)0 THE R(rHT TWNCr M VOTING: FOft W OTFONtKT KS V -- J I ' Lake City s entertainment and business districts. Four restaurants serving wondes ful food. Headquarters for tours and sightseeing trips. The c ' be 10, tal the 9'. J20.I "r hud the an 15737. ' 40 0 10. WITH TUB OR SHOWER $2-$- facl cash If th, whi "nance OUTSIDE ROOMS EACH 4 Shoul rece 'Vlous Ward' will give ion an hun"d deal when nil have jolir old (ires rcapxd and vulcanized. 4 nine in and have (hose dangerous tires taken care of before winter set In. the $j '.Id in, ASIC F0R A DEMONSTRATION! AnuUbU At mod era Le additional coat. Pncee and specifics Uooa subject to change viihouC Spencer Motor Co. MRS. J, H. WATERS. ...PRESlOfNt J. HOt MAN WATERS, W. ROSS 5CTTON.CO-MANAOE- A ffirw! ) of Colorado is causing titters on Capitol Hill by his $200,000 libel suit against Justice Ben C. Hilliard of the Colorado supreme court. Senator Johnson sued because the supreme court justice criticized Johnson for calling Roosevelt a warmonger, and for saying that Johnson was "trying to sit on two ehairs at the samp time" and didn't know which one he actually wanted to sit on the isolationist chair or the &r. uAZ n NOTHING BUT Pi CUEKPT POUTIOKN ' M MAI gV .f "U-2'- 55 Suffix, 56 Island. 58 Fallow (abbr.). generation? Can the home ties survive the ill effeets of war and Intrigue, of evacuation, heartaches, cruelty, tumbling walls, death? In summary, will the effect of present war conditions on young people he to make them bitter, hardened, send - barbaric, unmindful of religious and spiritual values? Harry Truman'i Merry-Go-Roun- NOW 9N DISPLAY, 50 ! youth? 1 S. 1911. ed by isolationists, but it won no nation and prevent the death of kudos from Joe Martin, Republi20.000 or more perfectly good can house floor leader. American small businesses. Martin strongiv disapproved of DIGGING the speech, partly because of its DEI AYS HIM bevindicative tone and "Ill be on top of this job in cause it fume at a timepartly when he conOdium months." two and another men To the statement that is struggling to preserve unity women are born enemies," one ex- - fessed to Truman. Right now, his inside GOP ranks, preparatory to 95 is of taken time up necessity pert says: launching next years congression"That is 90 per cent nonsense. per cent with drudgery and spade al campaign. work, leaving only 5 per cent for Of course men and women have However, what irked smart GOP doing the things he should be leader Martin most was Lambert-qm- s different interests, likes, functdoing, including the scribbling in ions. In an office or workshop HU ii re (to tell him beor in marriage, what pleases one pencil on long yellow sheets of forehand that hn was going to sex may displease the other. But, paper of programs which will make the scorching address. work. on the whole, any fruitful, exHouse Renublicans always "talk Coming into the defense organit over with Martin before getpressive, satisfying life must be-be U. S. ARMY INSIGNIA OPM all for a ization with budget not a battle but a cooperation ting into controversies, especialtween the two- - based on mutual activities already adopted. Odium ly one affecting party interests. he does that his found to of common chagrin d trust and objectives bet But Lambertson 13 Capital c I Answer to Previous Tuzzle funds to do the job cause he knew Martin would ad- happiness through comradeship." not have the him Peru. assigned IH.A L il 'O WEE Ml But within Odiums limit of two In 1839, Centenary College at 18 Debutante included months by the end of the year mop'onRDEfl s had this La Shreveport. (abbr.). lSjEJApSiTIAUL0R EO 19 Hole. among its iionilad rules: No stu- - Defense Contract Service will be S;C APCiE. dent shall be permitted to carry growing all over the country, (NTFRs R AHHAD 22 Pci taining U sword, cane or any deadly panding its force from a presentPiADD'OR That is not an aptimistie view1400 .o perhaps 4000, the assumpa U. S. Aimy weapon Whatsoever." b.bUp point tlon being that 4000 men can do group. I ti H'EiADi APE haps young people are not hearse 10 times the work of the 400. auto A Hartford. Conn., 23 Tellurium interesle i in present world eruptD ROPl OP VS license plate beating the "T think, said Truman to Odium, ions as they go deeper than the has a '. U0A0A I 26 (symbol). QT0nC ,"youie on the right track". signet. comic page IVrhaps the spirit of Weakens. E'TiA p GOBL'l'Yd the times will nut scare their Otak ijpN 27 Swerved. spirits. 30 The column will appreciate reViolent, ptiiMcaociL.Aui N E a TO H i 'AM sponses from anyone interested in 32 Guido to tins subject. SAME POPULAR PR1CES-F- 0I contents. 41 Color. VERTICAL- 1 34 Intel prctalion. Of the (Fr.). 43 Suffix. TID BITS HEWER. FINER ACCOMMODATIONS 2 Make 36 Accomplished. Here is part of a ixicm by Ken-o45 I.air. 39 Cloth pattern. wealthy. tux, urging folks to work for 46 Out o?. cold-bloode- d, I What do war and strife do to the thought processes of American in i himself, have just been 1, The Washington ('otton-labo- The Herald-Journwill not assume financial resMnsibility for any errors which may apear in advertisements published In Its column. In those Instances where the paper Is at fault, It will reprint that part of the advertisement in which the typographical mistake Hope to the end. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER LOGAN, UTAH, L 97 WEST FIRST NORTH IlIONE 20 ooLU |