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Show THE PAGE TWO. The f HERALD-JOURNA- HERALD-JOURNA- Professor Mike rfiaidp news L aflernoon by the Cache Published every week-dacat Center Street, Valley New spacer Co, at 75 Logan, Utah. Telephone 50. BY X V than to enter'uin. I do not mean that there wont always be Fred Allens and Jack Bennys cutting up capers over the ether waves, but that perhaps a ents a copy. Bv mad. in Cache Valley, By $2 50 a year; outside Cache Valley, $5(X a year earner, 40 icnts a month, $3 50 a year. True l.tiiu J Lih.riv tlmi a!f ihe Land Libei t 7 Full 5 Member United Press, NKA Service, Western Features and The Scripps League of Newspapers. long time hence the radio will become one of the major tools of I DELAWARE has petitioned the pedagogy. see central raU. S. Postoffiee Department to dioIn mind's eye I like Radio towers, omelhing a as Iho issue stamp in its honor, in New York, in which are Cily first state to ratify the Constitu- gathered the recognized leaders tion. in all the various of thought e branches of learning, of arts and With the arrival of the new 26 crafts and sciences. tians-r.ieifEach specialist has his own hour and stamps, with which value will be dropped and bis own "hook-u- p the So get your 25s now from the to reach his thousands or millions the nation. phdatedic agency at Washington, of pupils throughout sees school rooms or you'll have to pay a premium allMind's eye also over this broad land equipped later. with radio receiving sets and perhaps with television screens, so is A new special dcliveiy stamp the distant instructor may be being designed for the Philippines, brought right into the classroom. and a peimanent airmail issue is Classrooms will be larger, more planned. The present special de- like auditoriums, so that there livery is a product of 1906. The need not be excess duplication of tentative design for the airmails expensive equipment. There will be proctors in these features a "flying timnrau," or of auditoriums to maintain order, and Philippine beast carabao, probably "quiz specialists and liburden. brarians to supply necessary re. search books and make sure the France may issue, a special pupils are absorbing the informastamp in honor of Jean Mermoz, tion and instruction being impartFrench pilot lost on his flight ed by their distant radio profesacross the South Atlantic. sors. A few dozen truly learned inSale of the King Constantine structors could furnish instruction memorial stamps of Greece has to the children -- and the adults been discontinued. There are two of an entire nation. There will be, I imagine, an invalues. crease rather than a decrease in arts. instruction in the manual A portrait of Mrs. Charlotte And that will require a staff of Oarrigue Masaryk, late American teachers always in close contact wife of Czechoslovakias first pres- with the students. ident, will appear on one type of The academic subjects, however, this years childrens stamps" is- can be taught by radio in many sued by that country. Another cases as well as in person. This outlook is not too bright type will bear the portrait of famous Czech for the present teaching profesMencova, sion. for it would have the effect woman novelist. of turning most of them into mere classroom monitors. The prospect is not a bad one for the pupils nor for education in general. All this may not come to pass for many decades, so dont call me a false prophet if It isn't' in effect next week. mutter at the postoffiee at Filtered as .second-clas- s I.ogan, Utah, under the Act of Congress, March 3, -- 1S79. HUEY LONG THEORIES REPUDIATED IN ELECTION 50-ee- nt ic 25-cr- nt interestinif to know ju- -t how the .shade of the late Huey Lonp meived the news of our recent election if news of that kind is of any consequence in the bourne to which he lifts gone. For if the election did nothing else, it at, least served notice that the American people want no part of the things for which Long stood. Everyone connected with hint was stuff in American polirepudiated. The idea of strong-artics took as severe a heating as the most ardent lover of democracy could wish. Three principle satellites of the late Kingfish were involved in the election Father Coughlin, Dr. Townsend, and the ineffable Gerald L. K. Smith. And where are they now? Gone to join the shadows, all three; washed up on the beach g the stuand and left to meditate on the folly of of American the pidity public. Father Couglin has gone off the air. Dr. Townsend has a discredited and impotent following on his hands. Smith has just evaporated. T would lie preni-dtnti- SIT-DOW- Write this down, if you like, as a prophecy: Some day the chief function of the radio will be to educate rather BY I. S. KLEIN y HERE'S REPOKTKIt al m over-ratin- Bo-be- intimate of Huey Long when the Louisiana senator was in power. But in a general way all of them stood for the sort of thing he stood for bulldozing demagogery which demands followers who will JONE of these men was precisely an ' give blind obedience. Their appeal was to emotion rather than to reason. Their long suit was making impossible promises and arousing hatred. J. anything at all about American life ought to have known that this sort of thing couldnt CLARE HAYWARD Now anyone who knew 7 RECEIVES succeed here except under the most extraordinary circumstances. If people were completely and lastingly disillusioned, discouraged, tired out and hopeless, it might go over; otherwise it would not, in the long run, have the chance of the celebrated celluloid dog on his trip through the hot place. People who bus. 0 and Long rose to power at a time when discouragement folks! Howdy, expect to live at Bear Lake this summer and commute to work are already practicing the dash for the evening Is Gashouse We'll say he is! We'll say he is! and never miss - disillusionment were widespread. His imitators, clerical and otherwise, made the mistake of assuming that the discour-- 7 0 0 Gus flat footed? Why, that fell ow Why, that fellow a spot. agement and disillusionment were permanent. They were wrong, and they have gone into limbo. QUESTIONS & ANSWERS DEPARTMENT And this all leadsus to the interesting question: Did not 3 Dear Homer: What is meant our political writers overrate this man Long, even before by the term artificial refrigerahis death; tion?" Subscriber, j HE looked strong and his future looked bright, HONORS Churches Artificial refrigeration Is when pour your coffee into your in those saucer and cool it off by fanning it was it with your hat. MORE Continued from Page One of the investigating especially will present blocks to the session. stumbling Coming in the form of b.lls recommending any changes the committee has found necessary, it is eviwill dent that much discussion arise when the measures are introduced. Also formidable is the pending report of the appropriations committee which, since presentation of the budget, has been working in an effort to make appropriafund tions from the at hand and the money to be received in revenues. With an old age pension bill still up in the air, and homestead exemption slated to reach the upper house for final action by possibly Tuesday of next week, the session in reality faces the most important issue of the entire period. Reports committee none-too-lar- Jimmy Beamons, former Logan Elks baseball player from Cornish, was a visitor in Logan Saturday. William H. Shaw, former Cache county sheriff, was a visitor in Logan Saturday. Mr. and Mrs, Boyd Lindquist announce the arrival of a son at a local hospital. This is the first grandchild of Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Both mother and son Lindquist. are reported to be doing nicely. Mrs. Boyd Lindquist was formerly Miss Annie Hall, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Hall of the Logan Third ward. Warren Sohow was a visitor in Lake City Friday night, watching the Logan L. D. S. Seventh ward basketeers go down to defeat in the church semi-finSalt game. N. P. Nielson was a visitor in Salt Lake City Friday night. E.N. Laraen of Hyrum was a business visitor in Logan Friday night, afnd witnessed the basketball game. E. T. Hawkins is in Salt Lake City Saturday on business. Dick Anderson of Tremonton was a visitor in Logan Saturday. Charles Bright xf Idaho, brother og Sheriff Jeff Stowell, is a visitor at the sheriffs home on West Center street Cora Larsen, teacher at the Wellsville junior high school, was in Logan Friday. She is the daughter of Mrs. ' Rhea Larsen, fermer city recorder. Mr. e.nd Mrs. Howard J. Maug-ha- n and small daughter of Preston, were visitors in Logan Friin day. sprip,-tur- 0 0 TODAY'S WORST PUN How did you learn to walk Just pick it up the tight-rope- ? yourself? it has to be taut. Oh, no 0 0 0 Li'l Gee Gee's sweetie is so timid that if a girl stops her car behind his in a traffic Jam he thinks she is pursuing him. INEVITABLE Mrs. Bungslarter Did you expect me to accept you the night BEHIND THE SCENES yon proposed? IN WASHINGTON Joe Bung-darte- Oh, r 0 ' Anyone who knows Vice President John N. Garner knows that his aversion to cigarets he smokes cigars is only exceeded by his contempt for officials who take what he calls "graft," in the form - of payment for articles, endorsements or other uses of name and title for commercial purposes. But ar. advertising executive .c-lleon Garner the other day in complete ignorance of those d s. He said he knew the vice pres-- ; ident didn't smoke cigarettes himself, but if Mr. Garner wcjldn't mind endorsing the fragrance of a particular brand, he would be glad to give him a check. "In the first place," snorted Garner as his face grew red, "I I" never have and never will use my position to endorse any produet." "And furthermore, dammit," said the vice president as he serowled at his visitor's smoke, "I think cigirettes stink like hell." When Labor leader John I. Lewis went to Michigan to super It waa Friday, the 13th, 1913, and your apartment was No. 13 on the 13th floor. Ton riHildn't miss. .BY RODNEY BUTCHER. WASHINGTON In March. 1935. Assistant Attorney General Harold M. Stephens was arguing the constitutionality of the railroad retirement act, which provided pension for railroad employes after age 65. "It is a commonplace." he said, that physical ability, mental alerttend to ness and fail after a man is 65." Not one of the more aged jus-- , tices batted an eye. But Stephens hist the case. Later he himself. at the age of BO, was appointed a .judge on the District of Columbia court of appeals. yes. vise the General Motors strike and enter subsequent negotiations, he warded off newspaper correspon dents by saying: Let there be no moaning at the bar, when I put out to sea. A couple of his subordinates who spotted the origin of the poetical paraphrase, shivered lest some of their chief's enemies should pounce upon this and ridicule him. The line came from Tennyson's "Crossing the Bar, which has to do with death. At the time no one here was sure whether Lewis was setting off toward a tragic disaster to his career or to vie tory. That verse goes: "Sunset and Evening Star "And one clear call for me. And may there be no moaning at the bar "When I put out to sea 0 0 YE DIARY s, to-wi- r, Commission Director Is Guest In Iogan The elder Simon Cameron, fa- the of Donald Cameron American statesman, was once asked why his son, who was popular end clever, who had en- tered politics with the family prestige and influence behind h;m, 1 I ed. J will subject be "Courtship." (Editor's Note This is the seventh installment of the sacred pageant, "The Vision which will be presented in the Logan tabernacle for 13 consecutive nights beginning Sunday, March 21. The pageant, sponsored by the Cache and the Logan stakes, was written by J. Karl Wood who is also the director of the production.) Hyrum School Sets Date For Opertta -- The Utah State tello, with there. AIDA Maria: But only the priests read them here in 'Germany. Rhoda: That's true now, Maria, but Master Tyndale wants ail the English people to read them. And he says if we follow Martin Luther all the Germans will read them as well. Maria: Can the Master write so many books maam? Rhoda: Have you not Oh. no. Maria. heard of the invention of printing? Moria: You mean Unit Gutenberg im- printing Minnie M. N'arriner returned to her home in Washington, D, C., after a month's visit in Logan with her mother, Mrs. Hugi. John P. (union pre-s- ? A Grand Opera by Verdi Directed By PROFESSOR WALTER WELTI Monday and Tuesday March 8 and !) 50-PIE- Tickets are now on sale at Secretary's Office and Capitol Theater "lie biggest production of its kind ever attempted try college! HURRY!! 2 Mr. and Mrs. Alton Hendricks of Richmond were visitors in Lo- Matinee Monday, 2 p. m. Evenings, 8:15 p. m. WITH A CAST OF 158 SINGERS ORCHESTRA 2 is going to Poca- Idaho. Sunday for a visit his daughter, who resides Wf 2 9 to four-thirt- KUM-MAUGHAN-INN before Twelve OClock Midnight every night The New County Ordinance Says Close at Midnight Not Our Wishes But ITS THE LAW DANCE TONIGHT at the So COME ON IN featuring KUM-MAUGHAN-I- CASTLE HEIGHTS SWING BAND Regular Admission ee ihluwuuwm w t p Rhode Of course Thousands of hooks car be tmprin'ed while one is behas ing written by hand. Oh, we are Mrs. , living in a day of wonders, Maria. Tyndale: News? What news? Think of it, Master Tyndale says he hopes to get a book of Holy Parkington: The Bishop of London dm Scriptures in every home in Engknow that I am a secret land. A few days befor Knock is heard at the outer of yours. ing he called me to his hou door. asked my opinion about buy Oh Maria. Master Tyndale! Go the copies of your New Testa back to the kitchen. You must not Merchant that I am I saw be seen here. I will go and let to make some money for 0 0 0 him in. "Gentle Master Parkington" TO READING TRANSITION Exit Rhoda. Maria makes a few he, do your diligence and ,t, SCENE 3 fast passes at cleaning up, and exit. them for me, and I will gladly gu, Tyndale and Parkington enter you whatever they may cost ' Reader: room. Tyndale: The seeds of the reformation But if the Bishop want.. p,, thus were sown. Calvin, Knox and Tyndale: Did the Bishop of London say books it must be only t burr, others joined in Luther's protest, them. and the cry for religious liberty that? went forth In all Europe. Parkington: Parkington: What of that? The mu He did, sir and more. Up to this time the Holy Scripburn them anyhow and it m btm tures were written in Latin and Tyndale: What did he say more than that you should have the n unei were dominated by the Roman for enabling you to print olio s m'. church. Even in England priest- youve told me? stead. craft still reigned. The Bible was Parkington: He said, We had better be with- Tyndalc: jealously guarded and the people A few may still reach tn, ,'0m. kept in entire ignorance of its out Gods laws than the Pope's. mon people. teachings. The invention of print- Tyndale (with determination). My friend, if Goil spares me I Parkington: ing stimulated the publication of Exactly. books and the dissemination of will one day make the boy that knowledge through reading by the drives the plow in England to know Tyndale: Ii's a bargain. common people. A general knowl- more of the scriptures than the grasps Tyndaie does. Pope of Bible was the edge necessary hand. in preparation for the restoration Parkington: The gets Bishop Sir, you speak like a prophet. of the True Way of life. Parkington gets the God Inspired William Tyndale, an Tyndale: ft is my life, my dear Parking- Tyndale gets the muhey English scholar, to translate the ton. Parkington: Good-bBible from the original Greek into That's It. my mm Tyndale seats himself at his the English language. He was desk. Tyndale: driven from his native land by Good-b- y and God bless vnu bigoted priests to the nations of Tyndale: Parkington exits room. 'Iindoi, But tell me, how does my book central Europe, where he labored fare sits at his desk and begins (, in England? unceasingly in the accomplishment translate. Parkington: of his design. Enter Rhoda. Among the common people very SCENE 3 Rhoda: are it. for well, sir. They eager WILLIAM TYNDALE AND THE A message Master Tynd.th If it were not for the high church ENGLISH BIBLE Tyndale: men even now would your prophecy Scene: William Tyndales study Thank you Rhoda: fulfilled. But alas the scripat Worms, Germany. Tyndale has be opens message. Reads. been hiding here for sometime, tures are burned as in a furnace of Tyndale: Hades, all over England. carrying on his translation of the Tyndale: It's from a friend in England, Bible from the original English It all seems so futile. I have Rhoda. Greek Manuscripts. oh, how I have' worked! Rhoda: Maria the maid is discovered worked, Yes? First at Oxford, then at Cambridge. cleaning Tyndale's study. Books When my joy knows no bounds Tyndale: are piled carelessly around and paHe says they are burning inert and I felt to share my knowledge pers are scattered over the floor. of my New Testaments. One large ancient looking book is of the Holy Scriptures with the Rhoda: (sympathetically) common people of my beloved propped up on Tyndales desk and I was driven from her That's too bad. Master Tjndidi another opened lying flat. A quill England, shores like a beggar by the priests Tyndale: pen is seen in a bottle as if TynThey are burning them with sodale has left his translation to go and bishops who were supposed to lemn ceremony at the old cross ol on a short errand. Maria shakes be God's servants! Saint Paul's as "burnt offering' her head as she regards the work Parkington: Let not bitterness cloud your vis- most pleasing to ajmighty God'" of clearing the room before her, but Rhoda: she resigns herself to the task with ion, my friend. What a shame. a sigh. Rhoda, the landlady enters. Tyndale (unheeding) Then at Hamburg. Oh, the pover- Tyndale is lost in thought. Curtain opens. Rhoda (entering full of business) ty, the distress. Never shall I for- Tyndale: Rhoda, in burning the book they how Maria, Maria, get a move on get how hungry I was than I lookdid some other Master Tyndale will be fraught with danger was my every ed for, no morethings yourself. shall they do it move. But on. I was Cologne kept back before you get his study next. The text of my New Testa- they burn me also, if it be Gods cleaned. will that it should be so. Oh, God ment was at in last the printer's open the King of Englands eyes' Maria: hands. success was all too Alas, Yes, Ma'am, but the master near. Tyndale drops his head and The bishop of London learndoes litter up so. ed of my secret, from some gos- the message falls to the floor Rhoda: Lights fade out. printers. I was told that Curtain Dont complain, Maria. A man so siping closes. the to seize were about magistrates concerned in the transladeeply tion of the holy scriptures as Mas- my precious sheets. I escaped ter Tyndale is should be allowed with my manuscripts just in time. to scatter his books and papers Here at Worms I have seen my New Testament in the English as much as he pleases. language come from the press in Maria: I have snipped an Irish opeI suppose so Ma'am. Bits O'Blarney, He does great numbers. seem so thoughtful as he sits there them to England m every con- retta, will be presented by the ceivable in of barrels way flour, for hours looking into those books. grades of the Lincoln in bales of cloth, in sacks of grain, Upper school Monday, March 8, at the Rhoda; benow and in are clothing amusement hall at they ward beFirst It is task, Maria. Think of it, ing burned, the word of God, burn- Hyrum. A matinee will be giver ing able to read two languages! She has been dusting the table ed by the very men that drove at 2 p. m. and the evening performance will start at 7:45. but stops and regards the books me out! Parkington: Special features will be precuriously. Don't be discouraged, Master sented between acts. See, Maria, this is Greek and The common people of L T. Rosengreen and Miss Buist this is English. Master Tyndale Tyndale. England have tasted the word of are in charge of the operetta. told me so himself. Maria: What is he doing it for, ma'am? Rhoda: Agricultural College Presents So the English people can read the scriptures. Twelfth ward Conjoint meeting gan Friday. will include a violin solo by Pauline Mickelson; trombone Mrs. Lila N. Peterson of Hysolo, Norman solo. rum was visiting in Logan SaturPerry; piano Charles Heaton John Anderson day. of River Heights will be the speaker. LUTHERAN CHURCH ( HlilSTIAN SCIENCE "Man" is the subject of the Sunday, the Fourth Sunday in to be read by the Chris- Lent. Lutheran church erviiys y tian Silence society of Logan on will be held at p. m. in 7. March 274 the at North Second Sunday, chapel The Golden Text is: "Ye are my West street. Sermon topic: What witnesses, saith the Lord, and my Christ Himself Taught Concerning servant whom I have chosen" HIS Crucifixion." All-- iro welcome. A. Oltroge, pastor. (Isaih 43: 10). Bright Moments In Great Lives thcr pared with $777.20 last year, N. P. Nielsen, deputy clerk, report- Word has been received by relaward Sixth ward The Sixth tives here of the birth of tripevening services will include the lets on March 4 to Mr. girl Mrs. and following program: Vocal solo, Willmore of Rexburg, IdaJohn Spuhler: violin solo, Bert Ephriam ho. is a brother of Farr; duet Ramona Bailey and Mrs. Mr. Willmore Wesley W. Haws of I.ogan. Roma Barnett; scriptural reading, sacred drama Lloyd; Marjorie Mrs, Frank ISawyer and new sor. The Gift." have been taken to their home a local hospital. from Seventh ward A fine program has been arranged for the SevMr. and Mrs. A. N. McDonald enth ward MIA conjoint Sunday at 7 p. m. Vocal duct Marthu are Logan visitors. Balis and Carma Daines: short Raymond Jones of Raleigh, Idatalk. Lewis Tremelling; anthem, chorus; short talk, Roland Alien; ho, was a visitor at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Hulse Monxylophone solo, Keith Spencer talk, B. K. Farnsworth; song, day nd Tuesday en route to his home from Bakersfield, Calif. ward choir. Joe Bungstarter is such a booster for home industries that when Eleventh ward The Eleventh he had his appendix removed, he ward MIA conjoint Sunday evenInsisted on having a local anaes- ing under the direction of the thetic. Gleaners and M Men will include: 0 0 0 invocation, Loyal Cook; quarter, Olson Brothers of Providence; REQUIEM This is the season of the year talk, Arlo Weston; talk, Elma when sports editors make state- Hart; violin solo, I. P. Rosen-greements about talk, Dr. W. W. Henderyoung promising baseball rookies that they will son; vocal solo, Frank Parker; Marian Price. The benediction, have to deny in another month. ItctimcN to breakfast, and do play a new game with the chilTo see who can say, dren, t: with a mouthful of cornflakes, 1leaae pass the parsnips. And It a mightie jollie game, for Lord! it do be impossible to pronounce the sentence without supttering cornflakes all over the room, alSpeaker William B. Bankhead, beit Dame Brew, coming in from in who has served congress 20 the kitchen, doth sec naught of years, was telling stories at a par- humour in the merrie pastime, and ty he gave for his beautiful berate us, alas, right Tallulah, here recently doth He started to describe how the And so to work. boys down home at Jasper. Ala., had fixed it up to give him a big welcome reception to celebrate his elevation to the speakership. Dadt "You mean them dy?" piped Tallulah. Director D. H. Otis of the Agri"Sure," said the speaker, "I'm a cultural commission of the American Bankers association has been "Well, there were flags and bunt- a visitor in Logan Monday and ing all over town. The bands were Wednesday of this week, during out and there was an old fellow which time he has been the guest down from the hills and he wanted of Mr. and Mrs. F P. Champ. to know what was going on. They Director N. D. Salisbury, told him: 'Billy Bankhead's com- chairman Otis, of the agricultural coming back to town.' asof the Utah Bankers mittee "'Is that so?' he said, 'Where's sociation, and Mr. Champ reBillv been?" - turned to Logan Wednesday morning following large and enthusiastic meetings held the two previous days at Nephl and Salt Lako City with the bankers, extension club members and a had not scored such a success as workers, his friends had predicted for him. number of farmers of the state. "Don Is a likety fellow, and v id Or, Wednesday Director Otis addo well, but you must admil I dressed the County Agents and started in life with a great ad- Extension Workers conference at vantage over him," his father re- tne Utah State Agricultural colli ge and also met with the club plied. " hat wras that?" leaders of the state. Poverty, was the simple reply. actress-daughte- al reading, Beryl Rigby; ten minute talk, Seth Redford. Lloyd N. Johnson will be the speaker. God from your New Testament their own language. Someday th will arise and demand the men to give' Them the sinptUr-BuI am forgetting. I have for you. STRIKE N ut 0 19 3 7. The Vision 0 0 0 First ward Mutual conjoint days. But his strength did not reside in himself; About all the average man has the Logan First ward will comdrawn from the depression. He had to have a weary, hopeCache county spent $1284.88 fov his income tax this mence at 7 p. m. with the fol- snow less, and generally tire-opopulace to build a following. to do istoto pay removing during January lowing program offered: Music jji send in a stamp year and and February this year as comJust as he died, the populace was recovering its strength the girls mutual chorus; and ask for a penny change. its spirits. All this is worth going into, for the reason that the voters recent rebuke to demagogs was the most encouraging development of the whole campaign. The people have served notice, most emphatically that it takes more than an itch for power, a stout voice, and a heart full of hatred to succeed in this country. C, ABOUT A marriage license was issued today to John H. Wilson, Jr., 25, Logan, and Ruth Jenson, 19, Brigham City by the county clerk's office. Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Hayward have received word from their son, J .Clare Hayward at St. Louis university, that he is one of five juniors who were recently named to the university chapter of Alpha Omega Alpha, national medical honor fraternity, the highest student award the medical school confers. Clare is a graduate of the USAC and has been attending school at St. Louis studying medicine. Dr. Hayward is also a member of the honor fraternity. you MARCH SATURDAY, LOGAN, UTAH, L, NN i U Before Midnight! irrftMiTmif linrma la iftMinnTnrritriiiJ,WJ |