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Show THE II E II A LD-- J 0 PAGE TWO. , , IJbrrtythru n ia The teller- - ty Belt TUESDAY, FEBRUARY LOGAN, UTAH, A FEW ADDITIONS TO THE ORIGINAL MONUMENT I The Herald-Journ- U R N A L, 1879, United Press, NEA Service, We;, tern Features and The Seripps League of Newspapers. . ssss al ...i. nrimurv colors, they j., tiutsi only 4000 have nuniesi. in enlightened United States in 1933. 1 No-dra- ft, veh-tdntl- , SITTING ATOP which WITH JIM MARSHALL Some wideawake manufactuiers it seems to this Pillar of to build in a dnv cr's seat on vacuum cleaners and and carpet sweepfloor polishers ers if they don't the Gift will run herself ragged around the living room because one end of it is only faintly visible .from the other and on foggy mornings we have to keep a siren going from the easy chair before the fireplace so we can find it from what we call the passage but what the Gift insists is a "reception hall" Howdy, folks! Bicycling is again becoming popular in the United States, According to a new item. It is just a question of time until we again read newspaper editorials indignantly denouncyouths who ing speed-ma"scorch down Main street on their racing hikes. stations. radio It seems that Albert Einstein, the big reiativity-and- lIMlal vi(.l(1 Th(, frin on(, interstellar space man, was a guest at a banquet the other lmshci of apple is about one t,idrnight. During a lull in the conversation, he turned to his Could you tell me what is and asked: A full.lzed windovv .scm,n con. ' ; tains as much as a mile of this technocracy? if it were placed m one long wiro a once comes us mood over it in a moralizing Feeling picce-to desire we our after lumbago point month, usually just moral. It is : The letter s o s stand for words; they are simply a sig- Just because a man is highly, intelligent about one no nal 01 di!,lress thing is no sign he knows a lot .about everything. We have, in America, a habit of believing that be- - The letters c. Q. D once cause a man is a great cheese manufacturer his opinions meant the same thing: Distress. about history are worth hearing; or because he is an astronomer of note, he is also an authority on the care and kt a j tt-- ) I7T A 1 IN feeding of children. We mean no criticism of Dr. Einstein, who has our Regardless of the fact that ail profound respect. But expecting a man to know ever'- - fish of the species e Gusteropeiicus thing before he knows one thing superlatively well usually and eySed. results m disappointment. these tiny aquarium Javontes wU THE WORLD aiie of umor Mime of d - table-compani- on , TODAY'S OLD-TIME- R The Gift who is handy with a pencil and paper is designing a motorized, combined vacuum cleaner and dust-mo- p a -- Mn A UKULAiNU rr-i- Todays Oddity It not going to do Sergt. William Spence of the London (Eng.) police force any material good (0 tcn tke world that killing rats js no part of a policemans du(y jjut it pronably will mane him fee better. jn (19 firb place it cost Sergt. 5panco $123 to learn that knowl- edge and hes imparting it abso- lutely free. Sergeant Spence's experience was a 8erics 0 mistakes, all traced back to one prime mistake he Miouldn't have tried to kill a rut by throwing his club at it. He club crashed missed, and the through a plate glass window. jn court a chief magistrate de )ad liability for the damage on ,ehalf of the police Separtment, and furthermore ruled that Spence acted outside the scope of his em- Is the magazine are those dealing with the situation in Cuba As an who thrilled to the plea and of "Remember the Maine free Cuba from the butcher, Wey- ler, I am Interested to discover that, backed by United States mon- icd bosses and United States diplo- macy, President Machado has for years maintained a bloodier reign of terror against all true Cuban patriots than Wcyler ever did. Not since the time of the old ployment czars, the time of tho Armenian massacres or the time of Belgiums atrocities in the Congo has such merciless, ravishing, reckless, lawTjf d less and savagery been inflicted by a ruler on the best men and women of this country. That is, if what Carlcton Beals, the author of these articles, says is true. I suspect that he has his facts, seeing that he is attacking the chief business and political bosses of this country, and if be was subject to the laws of libel he would be in jail pronto. It is also significant: that the first issue of this magazine that entered Cuba was destroyed by the secret police of President Machado, and it is high crime to be found with a copy in your possession in Havana. They are almost as tuff down there with their censorship as the red hunters of the department of "Justice" are In our beloved land of freedom regarding tracts from Russia or books from European medical authorities. In contrast, I discover in the recent American Guardian this unloosin' New Years resolution: "Hear Yousei Hear youse! New Year's resolution extraordinary. URGENT! it has been demonWhereas, strated that the people of these United States can't moke a living on the country taken from the Indians, be it "Resolved, that we call a convention of all remaining Iudians to find out how in hades they got by before we came! Tee hee! . SIDEGLANCES fir, high-hande- fish always be by tne general public because their Latin names are too long and unwieldy. Thefte "hatchet-fish- " g em-M- I fc tho average, each Amer- family now pays $535 a in taxes; in 1910 the total only $110. h This looks something like an Austin and there are levers that let down the vacuum attachment or the mop or the polisher while the operator charges about the hack when living room had streetcars there is a system of trolley special racks on the rear end for carrying bicycles. w,lres hitched to the ceiling for Purposes -P- hoto bv BUI Reading. Pwfr fact there are trolley wires over al the house-- in the plans from a Great Britain, tip Taking wVVb- t- Another idea is that we tear ,f ma staircase which is verv ve hls flrst wlfe' out the altno1 h slippery and put in an escalator of course it would clank a bit but as all the machinery clunks and whirs and clicks conanother clank woultinuously dnt be noticed in fact when there are three an orange juicer a . typewriters too for the state It is rot early furnace a refrigerator and airlegislature at Salt Lake to pnss a strainer and several other gadgets fiom restaurants law prohibiting ad going full blast using cake dough in the compo you could add at least nine sition of strawberry shoitcake. other clanks and never notice it '' owpavT -- captivity, ... By George Clark 4 sroins SiXTIOX Its not the foozled drte That breaks the golfer's Its just the putt that halts Autos tonsume less gasoline when the tires aie inflated to the ri commended pressure. soul; Two inches from the hole. , I Li'l Gee Gee is opposed to the movement to reduce the number of ROTC. officers "There area t nearly enough lieu- tenants to dance with at the Palais d Or now," she chirrups o 0 E 1)1 KY ' o Thjs (I. iv e nt C0' other THE .NORTHERN BUILDING LOAN SOCIETY o hos- - do leave the I have been suffering I 111 HYRUM SECOND HOLDS REUNION HYRUM Old folks of Hyrum Second ward were entertained at the annual ward reunion Friday The program began at 11:30 and continued throughout the afternoon with a program and dancing in the evening. Luncheon was served to a large crowd. The program icatured as musical numbers piano selections by Mis. A. T. Clawson, Leta Allen and Shirley Allen; vocal selections by David Crookston, Ebba Blark-wooMack Rose, Keith and Ter-r- y Oakes and Halite Nielsen in a trio; Trombone solo by Grant Nielsen. A quintet from the high school directed by V H. Terry a'so gave numbers. Talks were Riven by Bishop Edwin Clawson Patriarch O. M Wilson, Eugene John.son, D. M. Bukmore, H P Hansen and Elmira McBride made brief remarks, Chandu, the was portrayed by Mr. Kel-le- tt and a comedy skit wns done by Dora Nmlsen, Verna Mi Bride and Bessie Ciookston Toasts were given by Leo C. Nielsen, A. J Petersen, A. D. Allen, B. M. Thompson and E. J. Wilson. A Swedish Monologue was done by Oscar Anderson and a duet bv Oscar Anderson andguitar Leon Anderson. The evening entertained consisted of the following program whi'h was well leceivcd: violin solo Bsdore Shoore; trio, Hal Nielsen, Merrill Wilson and Lyman Nielsen; a debate, "Resolved that Twin Beds Should be Prohibited by Law," Mr and Mrs. Herman Pcdcr en, Leo C. Nielsen and Mrs. Winfred Allen; a song by Ila Larsen and stunts by Oscar Andersen and company. Dancing followed with music by the Love Davis d, We have a great system fixed up for communicating in the living room now it is all done by shot wireless and you can tulk from one end of the place to the other just as if you were in the same room we keep in constant communication with guests and can assemble them for supper from the farthest nooks and crannies in a couple of horns Another thing that will have to be done is the banking of the corners because as it is now if you go at high speed from the kitchen to the telephone you skid all over the floor but that will have to wait ll,1til we get routes laid out and signs posted and all the detours marked you cant expect to get cvery- thing fixed up at once old AND, LISTEN: You wall have f excuse us now because there Is some kind of a message com- 'nK n from the north boundary f the living room only it is sort f faint due to the distance. P'tal, where trmn a pain the woofus tibia and the region of the gonrle; amt Lord! it do lie mighty fine to be In nn own house again, with Lit- tie Homer working jicsaw piiTlo AN a t ible, Rahie WPClf'n rn the dining J T I , 1 time orchestra. Brew pl.iving with her Patqv Anne doliie in one ornrr, amt Dame OGDEN, February 21 (I Pi knitting a "cii pink sweater dcn liveock reports for Monday, as made by the USDA, are as fol- far the roy ldji. and I.ord! there he luurht in this lows: 1; e that Hogs Receipts, 1014, including vail compare with the 1 heme ! And so, 91 market, 2S5 direct, 230 to j ' ys ' of om San Francisco packers, 129 to Oak- land packers, 133 to Swanston packers ond 146 to Nevada packer; hardly enough driveins to make reliable test; taking 10c lower than Friday and Saturday, or $3.40 on best kinds; few mixed underweights sold for $3,154(3.25; load Idaho, around 200 pounds, i mixed underweights ' $3 50, with m one or the out at $3 25, and packing sows,! F fieri, staying same place; not migratory, as $2 50 down. Cattle Receipts. 187, Mdtnt.iry birds, accustomed to s't ln;j or much: mne'ive; slug- - 44 for market, 52 to Losincluding, Angeles ri-harai tenztd by or re- - packers, 53 to Los Anec ;s market much as. 38 to occupaand bitting, qi ain't Hynes. Cali market, Lons as bookkeeping, slenograhy about steady; supply mi tly drive-- , aie sedentary positions. ins; lot 830 pound heriers, $3 60. Where it came irom. The Lat- - few lots common steers and hcif-in, sedentarius. from sedere, to ers, $3 25: no top kinds here: best' slauphter cows, $2 60; few medium Pronounced: Seden-tae-r- i. kinds, $2 23: undergrade down- ward to $100: bulls quoted $2.00'd 2 50 Tod tv, one persrn out of 1211, including seven is on a public payroll 267 to Salt Lake packers, 508 to San Francisco packers nnd 439 usually prodiuing notning to add to the national wealth to Lo A"glrs market, none offered for market Zane Greys ROBBERS' ROOST with j j 'X ftre H Now, you know you're not to lie s m his study. r rvr ' - r i r intermpt father when George OBHIEN Maureen OSullivan in 1 ts, 372 RECEIPTS Cash on hand as close of last fiscal year Payments on Installment Stock Repayment of Installment Slock Loans Deposits, Advanced Payments Deposits, Saving Stock Partial Payments, R. E. Loans Partial Payments, R. E. Contracts Interest and Discounts Insurance and TaxeS, Advanced Membership or Withdrawal Fees Exchange and Trans, of Dcp., Rents, etc. Note Payable $ 963.57 16,652.01 I,8t3.00 1X65 2,225.00 2,700.00 2,14620 13,729.75 f 179.01 j. 13155 1,25180 500 00 J t . . Total Receipts $ 42,37654 DISBURSEMENTS Loans on First Mortgage Securities Loans on Installment Stock Withdrawals, of Installment Stock Withdrawals, Advanced Payments Withdrawals, Savings Stock Dividends Paid during Fiscal Year Expenses, Inc. Salaries . $ 4,350.00 2,705 00 5,026 50 ...... JL 30.00 1,031.90 1,72660 1,87113 4 i Interest Paid Misc. Disbursements, viz: Insurance and Taxes Advanced Trans, of Deposits ar.d Exchange Sundry Accounts Real Estate Expense Suspense Accounts Bills Payable Cash on hand at close of Fiscal Year 1,380.59 113.00 447.52 402.84 47.37 370.33 j, t L L JL 217.6$ 22,000.00 63320 A L $ 42,376.51 Total Disbursements Statement of its Assets and Liabilities ut tho close of the year: ASSETS 653.20 $ Cash on hand and in Banks , a. 191,700.00 Loans on Real Estate list Mortgage) 7,905.00 Loans on Installment Stock 1 547.65 X Furniture and Fixtuics 10,32229 Other Real Estate Owned 374.10 Insurance ond Taxes Advanced 1.611.93 i. Expenses Paid, General 267.23 Property Expense Miscellaneous Assets S3 20 ? Suspense Other Accounts Receivable and accruals 2,496.94 Interest Cost 1,121.25 Jq 865.75 Saving Stock Dividends 6 A -- coining imjiMiay Norma Shearer Clark Gable in Strange Interlude Total Assets LIABILI IT EH General Expense Fund Stock, Fully raid Surplus Installment Stock, All Classes Saving Stock Advanced Payments Reserves for Contingent Losses Borrowed Money Interest Collected Uncompleted Cont. Inc. Bldg, under Construction Miscellaneous Liabilities Stoikholders Notes Reserve for Real Estate Losses Reserve for Dividends Pay Real Estate Income ..... ..... j , Pheep-Receip- the year Number of shares in force at the end of year 3620 Statement of receipts and disbursements during the pre ceding year: January 1. 1932 to December 31, 1932. - Today & Wednesday fr M( ma-gin- 4. 5. I .lVPStnPK b; 4 Located at Logan in the county of Cache, State of Utah, at the close of business on the 31st day of December, 1932. 1. The amount of authorized capital and the par value of each snare $100.00 $300,000.00 2. The number of shares sold ; 165 during the year 3. The number of shares cancelled and withdrawn during floor-polish- of Clambake, the Cove di- tri t who visited Salt Lake years ago. Mr. Clambake can remember way egg-lay- if: r 1 C. aquar-old-tira- m On ican year was If o r a c e creatures, y authorities on aquarium fish phasize their peacefulness. They look llke fighters, have the abiH- W to fly m the native haunts cf the Amazon, and thrive on mosquito larvae and other small aquatic insects. If these are un- available, they readily cat pre- Pared dried foods. Their flying consists of shoot- 0?L YEAH? lnK along over the surface of the (Nows Item) wtcr fl,r several feet, but none ever flown" from its iu'a up more energyHatchet-fisi are tl ,,i, k uml V'W 'V and favorites in homo aquanums because they take less care than shcl labor, saysJfci most fishes, and breed readily in cious-lookin- sW si ed French citizens alone are permitted to broadcast over French semi-month- ty singing was also a feature of the meeting. NEW . MANY The following committee was J) ihosen to assist the officers of the organized to carry on their OLDSMOBILE The Home and RICHMOND years work: beautification comRichthe lone mittee, Zaiush Thomson, Community section of Farm bureau met Friday at Webb and Ada Traveller; program The 1533 offerirg of Oldsmobile mondclub room with 40 women in committee, Rachel Anderson, Ethel the on seams Webb; tars, presenting the most advanccommittee, A talk membership attendance, Met-ril- l, ed modes have been the major was Lizzie Doty, Alba Webb, Lenore given by Miss Aidella n.otor attraction here during the s Lona fiir committee, Bullen; a demonstration on Clara Johnson, Maud Mera past two dais, Albeit H heThompand Smith, paper Ada Miss Peart, by Auto of Ca son, manager of Jacobs ladder rill, Bertha Hendricks; dress comdemonstration company, oldsmobile dealer here, and a Christmas tree we.c g 1 c u mittee, Evelyn Stoddard; organist, nave reports The new cars Miss Phyllis Nelson. Communi Margaret Johnson. continuous crowds of mo- by visiinterested torists and other tors to his showrooms at 30 South Main street, he says, "The easily apparent added value, at material reduction in prices, the distinctive styling of b jth tie six and the straight eight coupled with the ."'ghty individual attractiveness end smartness of LAST TIME TODAY ci'h Iuk. have made a deep on those familiar with Olutinob.le s inherent ami character! ue qualities of dependability. emi.'nrt and performance, Mr. ssid Iho.np-o"5. ec:.d only to heauty of ap-- 1 r'o u e, the public h displaying Coif0!, lltiusu d interest in the Fl'.her ii. livl luullv controlled " system This is considered the g elite it hea'th and comfort ii provement since closed bodies vane introduced. Tines "The lower, of botn the six and straight eight are made possible m a great measure by a new frame construction with what Olds engineers desigcross member. nate an This not only add3 to the strength cf the frame, but adds to the stability of tlm cars. "Every quality of performance has beep highly praised, especially the ease of control, quietness, and the smoothness with which the cars ghde along the streets. Com-are have been ts on every so favorable v.re feel certain the new Oidsmobiles will be accepted by the public as the finest ears the company has ever produced. "The wheelbase of the Oldsmo-Inl- e Straight Eight has been extended to 119 inches this year, and the treads of both sixes and eights have been substantially v, .uened. As a result the interior seating aiiangenients are wider and more comfortable, aid the cais nave added stability on all types of roads. "From an engineering standpoint, the most interesting now is the three-poidevelopment engine suspension used on both the six and eight. The three mountings are cushioned in rubber and designed to control torsional vibration. An unbelievable smoothness at all speeds results. "Numerous refinements have been made in these new Oidsmobiles, wmch keep their mechanical excellency on a par with the design advancements that have REPORT MADE TO THE BANK COMMISSION OF THE STATE OF earned them the title of style UTAH OF TIIE CONDITION OF leaders of the year." IFarm Women Name New Committees Grand Theatre No stronger advocate for the sales tax seems to appear in Cache Valley than J. II. Meikle. For months he has spent a great deal of time in various parts of the state in the interest of a sales tax. On February Id Mr. Meikle had an article published in in which he reported the progress of the the proposed measure. lie built a scaffold of tea reasons inwhy the sales tax is the best little tax system eve r vented. So wobbly was the scaffold a mere gust of Cache Valleys winter wind would blow it over. One by one his reasons will he scrutinized in cornirg articles. But today let us merely look into the r.cxt to the last paragraph of Mr. Meikles leport. Here it is: Regardless of party lines, all should unite and pass the transaction excise tax bill and stop tiie criticism of the press and the home folks. For your information: The transaction excise lax is a more high falutin name for the sales tax. It means the same thing. But Mr. Meikle wants all to unite and stop the critiHe doesnt want cism of the press and the home folks. the press to say anything against his pet idea. lie doesnt even want the home folks to say anything against it. Well, well ! Nobody must say a word against the scheme. AH the press and the home folks are supposed to do is to be quiet and let Mr. Meikle and Hon. Weston Vernon do all the talking. That reminds us that Hitler during his short reign lias He doesnt want suspended several German newspapers. the people to know. And the best way not to let the people know what is going on is to suppress and suspend newspapers especially newspapers of liberal tendencies, those that fight for,the rights of the common people OI Th(,rc are no known Like Mr, Meikle and Chancellor Hitler, neither did Isa- - silver deposits in the btte of New poleon believe the press should have the privilege to say York. what it thought to be right. lie suspended all French A cubc of goltl ,7 in,hcs on tt side would weigh one ton. publications opposed to him and nis ideas. Said Napoleon: If I permitted freedom ot the press, my Although there are only three power have .. would not last two weeks." . , THE FREE most recent bit of property reading matter Is entitled Com- mon Sense, a warm fortnightly to you), published in New York, with fellows like James Rorty he of Yawp, Yawp- ing fame, Walter Liggett, John Dos Passes, John Chamberlain and Stuart Chase as editors. The most amazing arUcles in 33. neck-line- Member HILL BILLY 9 HERE al Published every weekday afternoon by the Cache i I Valley Newspaper Co., at 75 West Center street, Logan, Utah. Telephone 5U. Price 5 cents a copy. By mail, in Cache Valley, $2 50 a year; outside Car no Valley, $5 00 a year. cents a month, $3 50 a year. Sy carrier, 40 sccond-ciass matter at the postoffice Entered as at Logan, Utah, under the act of congress, March CUBA 1 SEE I HE WANTS NO OPPOSITION Herald-Journ- 21, ..... $220,898.54 $ 1,00000 1,373.88 171,018.38 14,568.10 4 55 9,917.65 1,000.00 13,279.75 74.13 2 625.00 3 000 00 qjj 75 403 30 Total Liabilities . 89854 Number of shareholders, Dec. 31, 1932 355 Kerschcl Bullen, being first duly sworn according to law deposes and says, that he is secretary of the above named that the statements made in the foregoing report are true company and ami that said statement contains a full and correct exhibit ofcorrect the condition of said company's business at the close of the year 1322. fsEAL)bC1 and iV'Wn t0 $0 bCf'e me thU 30Ul ddy ofEJLnwyLM3. ' H' Commission Expires Jan. 18, 1937. otarvublic STATE OF UTAH, Office of Bank Commissioner. I, John A. Malia, Bank Commissioner cf thv State cf Utah do ihhebty(Certlff t.h!the Agoing is a full, true and correct copy of of the above named company, now on file in mv 0lfice this ilh day of February, 1933. JOHN A MALIA, Bank Commissioner, |