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Show rirrfitin,1rto,-',- THE PAGE TWO. HERALD-JOURNA- LOGAN, UTAH, L, FEBRUARY FRIDAY, 1936. 28, HES GETTING THAT WILD LOOK IN THE EYE AGAIN The HERALD-JOURNA- L PLANNED BY BOARD Published every week-da- y afternoon by the Cache Valley Newspaper Co, at 75 West Center Street, Logan, Utah. Telephone 50. Price 5 cents a copy By mail. In Cocbi Valley, $2.50 a year; outside Cache Valley, $5 00 a year By carrier, 40 cents a month, $3 50 a year Member United Press, NEA Strv ce, Western Features and The Scripps League of Newspapers Liberty thr matter at the poito'fice Entered as second-clas- s all the The at Logan, Utah, under the Act of Congress, March Land. liberty Bell. 3, 1879 S.MPP 'Proclaim Adult classes in ph sial education and swimming for women will be held on Monday s and Wednesday at 7 30 p m at the Logan Jun.or high school, it was announced today. The classes are being sponsored by the Logan city board of education Classes to be given are designed to stimulate interest in individual It Iloudj, folk! t diplomatic- is never iwy carry one of your - Hifrs biscuits to the basement, shellan it, and give it to her for a paierei;lii. It must parlors RACE RIOTS MAY MEAN END TO RULE BY ARMS appearance, strength and ability Improper standing and walking, as t, well as are problems to be considered and improved Specific exercises will be given for specific corrections Mrs. Eva Drjsdale who is in charge of the course as instructor lists among the benefits of such a course: distribution of glandular secretions, the relaxation of nerves and the development of skills, endurance and poise Registration will take place Monday at 7 30 at the gymnasium A short business meeting will be held before the swimming class A small registration fee begins. will be charged One lesson will be given for 25 cents qnd five lessons be tough on the beauty s nee Prosperity old it arte d over-weigh- Dr Returning lifting fares An old timer Is one who can remember when girls jumped out and walked because tile horses started acting up. divine right of the Euiopean races to lule anybody can knock down .seems to be standing in a rather shaky position these days. POEM OF SADNESS Riots sweep across Sna, where Fienth troops strive to Iteep order in the land that was mandated to France after 1 watched her sweeping up the aisle. the World War. These liots, in turn, stem from the unrest Without a care or sorrow, in Egypt, where the English have been hating a good deal And thought, she will be sweepof difficulty persuading the natives that British supervision ing up The kitchen floor, tomorrow is all for their best interests. And the Egyptian trouble, in its turn, glows out of the Bathing alone will not preserve a doctor Thats all things the Italians are doing or trjing to do, to the Ethio- health," says very well, but our bathtub is only pians. one at a time for big enough Fifty years ago, no one would have worned much about don't Surgeons usually like such things. If the Italians had wanted Ethiopia, everyone operations, because would have sat back to enjoy the show with a clear con- emergency they don't give them an opporscience. tunity to look up the patients fiIf the British police in Cairo had had to whack a few nancial rating first- dozen demonstrators on the head with yard-londubs, we would have spoken soulfully about the need for a firm hand RADIO GUIDE in repressing disorders. 7 :06 Raising boils for pleasure And French shooting of Moslem rioters in Damascus and profit would have drawn from us only the reflection that Arabs 7 30 Children's hour; of Jesse James' last stand, a troublesome are breed, anyway. and talk on and THE SWIM CLASSES ARE These boards are obuuning farmers cooperation answering these specific questions affecting their localities, reportj show. All the states, with but one or two exceptions, are conducting the county agricultural planning project, Dr W heatley reported These states will secure answers to the questions being asked the farmers, so that summaries may be made by states, regions the country as a whole Agricultural summaries of the nation and state will show the overlapping interests of different groups of farmers Within the next two weeks. Dr Wheatley and Director Owens will meet all the county agricultural planning boards throughout the state They will discuss with members a uniform manner of obtaining information of the county plans In addition, they will attempt to work out a system of conveying, to the department of agriculture in Washington, D C., information of the various county planning boards 'ta msm mm for $100 For information interested parties may call the board of educa-- 1 tion or Mrs. Drysdale. 0 UJ.'ilftn UNIFORM SYSTEM i ji (i i QIHD fj$ BEING WORKED OUT 103 g -- guns What to do gunplay. We have ing bed folds up. when the take things WE dont to 8 30 Quiet hour: Trip thru a suspect that the nation which takes possession boiler begun works and recorded battle remarkable of some other nations territory has some points from Ethiopia, of resemblance to the big city gang w hich goes muscling in 9 00 My Beauty Secrets, by on some other gangs territory'; and if the original owners Wallace Beery of the land make trouble about it, they are apt to get our We don't want to cast any assympathies. persions at the weather man, And it is beginning to look as if in the long run the stunt but he was reported to us coming down to work this morning of ruling some land by force may cost a great deal more than with overshoes and an umbrella. utterto an be worth. Indeed, it may eventually prove it is His forecast was Fair and Warmer. ly impossible proposition. One of the most noteworth sentences in the dispatch tellOne of the of a riots in Syria stated that economic college footballdisappointments hero is ieamiug ing of the standat that almost a I mted btates Steel doesn't life in the republic is pick its vice presidents from still." among star halfbacks. of course, is the inevitable accompaniment of such THAT, YE DIARY upi sings; and whenever economic life in a subject a to comes standstill, imperialism immediately To playing bean bag with Little territory Homer Jr. and the addlepated loon ceases to pay its own way. do toss the bag on the table and The chief ooject of imperialism is to collect customers break a and I reprove him for the home folks; and when your customers are out in the mightihe, vase, and toss the bag back to do at and stones hitteth it the chandelier and street throwing policemen, you arent going carom off to the mantel and sidemuch in the way of selling them a bill of goods. the clock and knock down We ourselves were once the victims of that kind of im- swipe the chromo of Aunt Emmy, and perialism. We broke away from it and set up shop for our- my wyffe came in and ask what do, and we blushing and sneakselves, and in doing so let loose in the world an idea that is w'e ing away And so to worke. still working. In spite of wars, dictatorships, and repressions, that idea Break out the medical stores. has spread all over the world and has touched the imaginations of oppressed people everywhere. And it may well be that today we are witnessing the iBRIGHTMOMENTSI closing phase of the great era of rule by force of arms. Among the very rarest of violins so comfortably, nowadays. anti-Frenc- h French-mandate- d open like gasoline He says that despite the fact that it has low heat value, it can be made a very excellent fuel by using it This would be under pressure most likely to reach its peak m Diesel engines, which are dependent on high pressures. Meantime, while trying to convince the world that ammonia is just the thing for the auto of the future, he'll con- At the University of Oslo, NorProlessor Halvorscn has n crusade started out on a to reform the motor world The professor sees good old ammonia as the coming motive fuel. While the ammonia has only heat value of gasoline, he admits that it has other great possibilities that offset this value. For one thing, in its combustion, it does way, one-ma- one-four- sot generate carbon monoxide gas. Also, it will not burn in the tinue experimenting WASHINGTON LETTER NE1 Service Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON. perhaps the old men of Congress are not hurrying cs into war. Bat they are doing considerably less than nothing to keep us out of It. As late as a month ago. It ap; peared that drastic, permanent neutrality legislation was certain as a result of strong congressional sentiment backed by overwhelming and articulate popular desire. Now the atmosphere suddenly has become little short of jingoistic. Congressional leaders and administration are dltclving previous neutrality plans in favor of extending the relatively weak and supposedly stopgap" neu- - that Senator William E. Borah, a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, might try to make a burning Issue of it if there were any curtailment of America's traditional not actual, as England learned to her profit insistence on "freedom of the seas" and other neutral rights. Borah might have embarrassed the administration and cost It votes. Borah will soon be 71 years old. fFHE man who split the whole business w ide open in the Sen- - ate y,as Hli am Johnson of Call-th- e fornia. who announced he would fight anv abandonment of "neutral rigMs- t0 the biUer end U was Senator Johnson, too, who triu3r C.1 17 lB eectv, states- - publicly revealed the supposedly se- Theoretically responsible cret nd blt denunciatory an. statement by program Others the Japanese. John Bassett Moore, international freedom of that the seas" law expert, to the Foreign Relamust be preserved at all costs. tions committee Joel son Is 69 years old John fpiIEHE are several reasons for Bassett Moore Is 75 yeats old. the change of outlook. But no factor Is more interesting not to among the fighters say significant than the cast of 'P'OREMOST for strht neutrality some of characters involved, which reveals them war veterans with their that the contest over neutrality is. ages, are- and lias been, a startlingly definite Chairman Nje of the Munitions conflict between the young men of 43. committee, old. Congress and the Senator Bennett Champ Clark of The young men are willing to 46 have their country sacrifice trade Missouri, Senator H inicr Bone of Washprofits, and neutrality rights to ington, 52. avoid the ravages of war. The old Thief Investigator Stephen wen. It appears, are not. of the Munitions comThe first statesman to challenge mittee, 39. (His staff averages the Senate Munitions committee under ;;o was Senator Carter Glass of VirCongieseman Maury Maverick of ginia Glass is 78, the oldest of the Texas, 40 senators. Congressman Vito Marcantonio One of the chief fears that lea of New York, 33. the administration to feel that the Congressman Byron Scott ol Calover well go neutrality lsue might ifornia. 32 until after election was the belief (Con right, 14; ne t Service, Inc T VS. i 8:00 fold- UTAH FACES SOIL EROSION PROBLEM Practically every piece of land we have in the state of Utah is being depreciated on account of Much of our good soil erosion running away, Director William Peterson of the Utah State Agriculture college extension told club leaders delegates to the convention here in their Wednesday morning session at the college Soil is made up of just disintegrated rock, but the rock is not enough to make soil, it must be mixed with organic matter where bacteria live and make plant food The soil is good if it has a mulch on top. It does two things which furnish food for the plants and increases the rate of water absorption. If the ram should fall on the ground at an intensive rate of one inch per hour and if our soil has an absorption capacity of one inch, The unthere will be no r f. disturbed ground, m many cases, The rate of shows no erosion water absorption is measured by the amount of organic matter m the top soil, Diretcor Peterson said. are those made by Maggim who Two complaints come to our was born in Brescia in 1590 and office with respect to agricutlural died there of the plague in 1632 production: 'My land is more difThe last of these was uncovered ficult to irrigate, and I cannot by Efrem Zimbalist about 20 years grow the crops I used to. Those ago. He discovered it at Lake two things come often. The alfalGeorge in this manner; fa does not grow as high and I A policeman came to him one cant produce the tonnage I did day and said. "Mr Zimbalist, I earlier The reason is essentially have an old violin that has been that we have less organic matter m the garret for about 80 years in the soil than we did formerly I have been offered $100 for it I and because of this there is less would like you to try it out for water absorption, and if there Is me, and tell me If it is worth less absorption some of it will run more over the surface Last year we went on a farm said Bring me the violin, 11 1 where the man was irrigating a and Zimbalist, try it The instrument had a good tone plot of ground 16 rods long, that and Zimbalist told the policeman ran down a gradient of about four 111 give you $150 for The water run down it, and if per cent it is what I think it is. Ill send hill in furrows We laid down a canvas at the bottom of one row you $150 more The great violinist took the in- and then another over a few rows. strument to New York, had it W hen the irrigating was over we and brought back to its original state, picked up these canvases and sent the policeman a check found that one had 47 pounds and the other 73 pounds of dirt which tor an additional $500. had washed down. There was about It was a genuine Maggini this amount from every row when he was irrigating, and little channels were cut as the water ran down W e need new methods in irriW'e need new methods m We folks of the mild mannered gation northwest just cant take it when keeping the soil fertility up, and the weather gets either hot or there is no better group to whom cold I speak especially of the In- you might teach these things than habitants of the entire coast liv- to boys and girls I say girls ing between the ocean ard the because the girls are going back Sierras; over in central Washing- to live on the farm and they are ton, Oregon and California the interested just as much as the denizens can taae it tuff and boys who cultivate it We have our growth as far as thrive Lad brought another husky chap water is concerned and we must out for a week-en- d at the hill make better use of it We might shack and the two bedded down have to renovate and change our in a narrow bed. while I curled farms to preserve the fertility of up on the cot. It was not a cold our soil and grow more economic night; nor was there a wind; I crops I have hopes that in the suppose maybe it went to a dozen young clubs someth'songwe ofcan that get degrees below freezing that night, sort might be taught it froze a half-inc- h on the ram demonstrations m every communito we learn will cultivate that barrel and the spring faucet re- ty quired a bonfire to thaw it out and irrigate better Yet mild as was the night, sleeping m a shack under abundant BLE4H. ITAH AREA FOIND bedding, the two husky fellows in a narrow bed shivered and slept A region BERKELEY, Cal (( I by fits and freezes Nor was I comfortable, every on bleak Navajo Mountain m time the cooling shack creaked southern Utah in which no aniand groaned, as the fire m the mals larger than a fox exist, has tin pot stove died, I woke up and been discovered by scientists from twisted and turned, coiled and un- the University of California. The coiled, even my ear got cold and present expedition is believed to my nose tingled, yet for years 1 be the first ever made in the slept in unheated parsonage bedrooms where 20 below and not 2vh above zero was winter routine Having nothing else to do I the yet swollen with rewatched the stars above the icy cent stream, went about it3 noisy rains, fog bank; the fog covered the business and an occasional rift in canyons and climbed the firs to the fog would show- - the hoar the tops of the second growth frost, jeweled, painting with The heads of the big trees, the gleaming pencil, the nlaek stems tops of the black snags the dis- of bracken, and lacing with silver tant ridges, rose above the fog spioer web in the crotch of and stood m the clear sky where the the cherry tree old St. Helens was assisting the Silence profound, except for the Great Dipper to point the Pole creeks gossiping to the stones, Star a hot brick at my feet it In the valley, hidden in the fog, given woulr have been a lovely night. H in-of- HILL BILLY H FOR EM n d Agin Em This column, is for the U"e of the Herald-Journreaders. Any communications not libelous are welcome, no matter what the subject. No anonymous articles will be published. The Herald-Journa- l, however, does not necessarily agree with the opinions expressed here. They are the individual ideas of the writers. PLAYGROUND MILAN, Thomas O A. (UR) Edison A barn where played as a boy will be turned into a meeting hall for the local Boy Scout lodge. It was presented to the Scouts by Mrs Mina Edison Hughes, widow of the inventor Edison was born - tilan. Feb. 11, 1847. j- Both and etdtion-to-atatio- n person-to-perso- n rates arc reduced all day Sunday. rates from The lower actually apply 7 p. tn. Saturday night until 4:30 a. m. each Monday. pedal Offer READER VIEWS PENSION MOVES Editor, Herald-Journa- l: An article from the pen of I C Thoresen chairman of the Peoples Pension committee, gives some excellent advice to the aged, pertaining to the signing of the Social Many of the readSecurity blanks ers of the Herald-Journwill be pleased if you will kindly give it space in your paper. We quote it as follows: "Refuse to sign the new or old pauper application blanks, nor comply with the following arbitrary and illegal ideas of this welfare board: 1. to to Refuse agree repay any pension or assistance promised you under said law, and under no circumstances give a lien (deed) on your home or other property as security for such repayment (Said requests are not demanded by any law). 2 Refuse to swear you and all your relatives are paupers. (They are not responsible for your support) 3 Assert your right to a pension without being on the public relief rolls (Inconsistent and radical) 4 Demand your ngnt to be named on the certified lists of eligible qualified pensioners, now required by the U S S S. board, basis for which the People's Pension committee has filed with the governor. 5 That you be accorded a fair hearing before being denied a pension as section 2, pp 4, SS. act PRESERA ED A uniform system to assist county agricultural planning boards to obtain a clearer picture of the agriculture of their respective counties is being made available, according to Dr. O J. W heatley, extension and VV. W economist, Owens, assistant director of the Utah State Agricultaral college extension service The accomplishments of the individual county agricultural planning boards will be sent to the department of agriculture at Washington, DC, and this information will be checked and returned to the farmers What would be the probable normal annual production and disposal of the various farm products in the county, if fanners adopt the suggestions made by the county planning board," is one of the questions being worked out by the boards throughout the state For a Limited Time Only ! al ed provides." LOTTERY Ira LIRE For a limited Time Only We Will Allow You a Trade-IAllowance of $25.00 On Your Old Range or Cook Stove! n On A New L&H ADVANCED ELECTRIC RANGE fi A Cole TO DEBTORS An idea for ob- VIENNA taming quick payment of accounts has beett evolved by the Innsbruck Gas and Electricity Works It is handing out lottery tickets to prompt payers, and today there is not one outstanding gas or electricity bill in the whole town. U.P PIGS PAY (HI KOI DEBT DELMAR, Iowa d'Pi Pigs donated by parishioners nearly paid off the debt on St Patricks of them, fatChurch. Thirty-on- e tened by the congregation for a year, were shipped to Chicago and sold the proceeds being applied on construction cost of the church Buy Now - - This is your opportunity, $25.00 for your old stove. ST0PPED-U- P Prices on .NOSTRILS Jut to CO ly Utt Mentholalum le to help open the nostril and permit freer brealhinji. MENTHOL'ATUM 4reoCOMFOItT0o4r If yaw prefer note 8ropi,w throat spray, call for the MEW MEMTH0UTUM LIQUID In handy bottle with dropper i ranges in gleaming enemal are decidedlv moderate . . . Terms Come in. Find out for ourself hew economical electric cookery Take advantage of this offer. is.' LoSLH con-enien- t. real- CRYSTAL BOTTLING & FURNITURE COMPANY 0 Y EST FIRST NORTH LOGAN, UTAH r x. |