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Show THE PAGE TWO. HERALD-JOURNA- 19: M A Y U !: S D A V, UTAH, LOGAN, L, DESIGN FOR A PAIR OF ROOK - ENDS Th e HERA Published every weik-di- Valley Newspaper ( i gan, Utah. Telephone , Thoughts URNA L LD-J- O iifieriiuuti 7.' U i st (Yiiti tiy t ne r ( 'in ne Io- - Prii e 5 cents a copy Py mail, in Coi he a year; outside (ai he Valley, $5 00 a carrier, 4u cents a month, $3 5u a yeur. 12 5u alley, Py By Things Member United Press, American Wire, NKA ServPeatmen and The Scripps League of Proclaiia Liberty thru 7 and .7". Queer Power Of Mind Seen all the FOODS CREAM-PUF- F '1 newspaper recently opened a pi ie mutest A es, asking them to submit old foods; and no limital who lias recipes for w rai the plodded gamely through output "f modern lookcr.v can do less than hope that the ladies of Miihigan ally 'round and make a great occasion out of it. e might just as well line the fact that 01111' strange fads and fancies have been flourishing in the American kitchen of late. Our forefathers waxed great and strong on solid fodder that would nestle up to a man s breastbone and stay there, letting him know that he had eaten someworld thing; we, their unworthy descendants, are Bring alaborain which the Kitchen has become an experimental that a plateful of tory for a ladies bridge dub, fluff on a dew le'.tuie leaf is aitually held to be adult human besuitable nourishim nt for ings. MICHIGAN' for housew t I Sit r I tv ii it! ho Mi iv e .shopper nuMt run ,u homo in t hr ,2;l or it hr i1' Ini Uy, two Mini hint Kx off Mam or Mu t In m da' s for a .snoppvr is of no Ui r intjior am r to thr piii hi v.,,ii!v By at tml ( omit IaH S it uni iv a park'-iore qiP of rvriv fiv hvi) hint k radim on Main wit hm four hr lM(t was rm pt y w rrr filled with .stmny r s and s behind hands a i In-- I hr-p- d Mr I ltd t p ui r walks ho son - in Mi. ting to Mn -- M at along pai ,)dt ar paikws most mil ha assnig to thr ho are fort rd to v. ilk thr .so ungth of Main stmt to Dal aianv r t - upon Winn, to fuel that nmo walk, hat thmr dttuil mini, or any othrr little about tii1 prronalitv i iimng ominrnt rti through thr null of all for hr hr ip un money t ntri tammriit (jf tin md prat In idlt rs who havr nothing to do hut it to and to stait and To to find out about lien people began IT started,likeprobably, itamins. Now 1tam1ns are all very well in things their way, and a steady diet of salt pork and boiled potatoes is probably a trifle heavy Ibr city folk. But once sdence reared its ugly head in the kitchen, it opened the way for all manner o( abuses, and the volunteer advantage of it. dietary advisers lost no time in taking They began with desserts, and tiie way their can be gauged by the fact that they actually tacked a dressmaker's word like chit Ion onto a sturdy thing like pie. They debased ice cream by discarding the freezer and chilling into solidity a series of weird mixtures of tints and flavors in the icy tray each mirturo guaranteed to provide at least one lump of pure ice to the spoonful. From desserts they moved on to salads, 'they took to nuts, to launching bananas grating carrots and chopping to throwing at homo sapiens in oceans of ma.vonnai.--e- , whole platefuls of raw vegetables as if he were no better than a rabbit. They elected faery concoctions ot gelatin, tomato juice and whipped cream fair to look at, but passing strange to the palate. They put whipped cream into soups and breakfast foods into custards. They turned puddings trom honest pffairs of solid crusts and firm interiors into quavery, watery confections that will collapse at a touch. They sinned against the potato, by slicing and perforating it into unearthly shapes and then frying it to brittle against the egg, by forgetting that the egg was Providence to nestle, sputtering, against slices hv designed of fried ham; against bacon, by slicing it thin as tissue paper and broiling it within an inch of its life. mind-wor- v E I k c Behind the Scenes in Washington -- rrr:, FTwintim. j Ht-r- 1 v it- tlroad-naiitiht- to Depend on Aluminum Co, Ford Refused Cut Editors Note: Following is a the sixth of senes of short articles telling about aluminum, and how and why the Aluminum Company of America is the controlling factor m this nation's supply of the metal. 11 44 vx The famed model T Ford, known world as a tin lizzie almost became the aluminium liz- - 1. Taylor' insistence on going behind the assurances of his immediate subordinates to fipd out the extent to Hliieh the C. I. O. really could make a dent in his corporation's production. 2. A complete factual report by Taj lor '.o .1. I. Morgan which caused that mighty financier to give him virtiuil carte blanche in ersuaduig the corporation's hoard that it was good business to reach an agreement with Lewis. According to this authoritative version Taylor went to Kuropo last summer convinced that the C 1. O s drive in steel was organization .'Ohing to woriy about. After his t in tne fall, for reasons which ire not clear here, he decided to make his own investigation. He .vent to Pittsburgh and other cities ind interviewed whose jobs Drought them into clos-- r contact with tile rank and file lirin those with whom Taylor sea- It has just occurred to us that the Western Union failed us in the recent national election, ft neglected to provide us with ready-mador good congratulations standard wishes to the new president. e iw" The story is one of the most revealing of all, in connection with the aluminum monopoly. It was before the world war tarted that Ford considered making several parts for his car out of the new metal, He experimented with it. and found it good. As far as can be ascertained, the Aluminum Co., agreed to farn-nd- i him with certain amounts of its exclusive product. So Ford spent JA.OnO.ooO putting in machinery in one of his plants TODAY'S WORST RUN hat makes this steel spring jump around so It a. ts as though it were nervous" "Well, what do you expect? Its all w rought uji " V oil, the swimming A imjM-tunii- ( E elopebride- what v Ivory Ida has just gone down the drugstoi e to buy some hair tome She says she dot n t need it herself, but the fur tailing out of her t oat s d how-evt- Motorist Excuse me is this the highway to Ogden? Bus dm or Yes. Motorist Then would you irond letting me have a little more of U ' One of the things modern life is bihies continue on a til thev aie fo years w it ti A that is wrong that too main bottle diet unold. E DIARY In the evening, with Dame Brew, roadside tavern, where danced l.tl.c to harpsichord ami tlagiolet and eontrahussooii, and the mighty prettie, alln-i- too fast of fi'inpo, or else I do be growing old and short of breath, heaven forbid! Anon to home. to a niti-situ- e t Aw. jet's skip this t ir.i f; niv ft are buttin' tn e something awful mcntd Fdt ind pi o n t : making hi.-- own tires, his n n a dt oail-But with aluminum, he found, t he could ,tvllHe th'S com The im pany (ontrollmg all of t ho bauit dijNits, m addition to iM j'ltents, eould not hr met hv compel it ion L. d t.. it L nt Sti t dh ,upon thit aeianrmim m mnpo! f'r Oi oilncr m Is. runiy M Ml! uggt d oil all ;he ;ins shoulijrr, ut Mas joint dlc "f .duinn.nm - fhin i!d mu Ihimv, in e, he ll s hntu ht t and wrote Mf hm r riilhon and lliftal 'ilfilt 'XI'cn-.MOIJK l()Mul;i;o 111 c i jkd hi-- 1 spacious salons of the magnificent Sehoenbrunn Palace in Vienna first attracted musical genius that, even from the 13th 'JHE century, has made that Austrian capital the musical center of the world. Now Vienna celebrates the 70th anniversary of "The Blue Danube Waltz, famous masterpiece of Johann Strauss, the younger. The ambition of many musical artists has long been to work in the city that once housed such masters as Mozart, Schubert, Brahms, Beethoven, and Haydn. Mozait was 6 vcuis old when he played in Sehoenbrunn Palace by invitation of the Empress Maria Theresa. Schubert was born there; so was Fritz Kreisler. Brahms and Beethoven lived there more than 30 years; Schumann and other great musicians for shorter periods. Since the World War. the gaiety iunsulted of Vienna has subsided somewhat. Now there is a new interest, parTaylor tnen reported to Morgan, ticularly in who, with the late George F. Baker, the music of had persuaded him, against his Strauss. A reluctance, to take over executive iful command of V S. Steel. He is supisstamp, posed to have told Morgan that sued by Austhe Lewis union was strong within tria in 1923, the steel plant gates, that the corporation faced a big year of producpictures the musical caption and protits which could hard-Ibe had if plants were closed, ital. I.'3T. NKA Smlce, Inc ) 'hat the sympathy of the federal (Copyright, md Pennsylvania state govern-nent- s would he with the strikers. Nothing eould be more obvious :o Tavlor and Morgan than the fact that the independents would tlounsh and produce full blast at U. S. Steel's expense in case the itter's plant were tied up by strike tVhal these two industrial-financia- l giants went through mentally and emotionally to reach an agreement can onlv he imagined But when Taylor went bark to sell a hostile hoard of directors on a new labor t elutions policy he was tnvincinly Washakie May 2 a tortified hv the back of Morgan P.ir Newspaper The Wa.shHKie seh ! hoard in Heads of the independent com-iuK to graduate Joni.nv Moose-loo- t H.b's have hicn hitler at Tavlor s buy, Junior, from the sixth iver since, assuring each other they Kfade tins year so they ean use .could tover um ede as 11110 h as his desk for a new upil coming U S Stct (Oiunlol Rivilrv has m n i fall from Lom upuie Flat been increasingly ho ird said Junior i$ old Hut The intense plamlv it would be relatively as du-(s- t enough to vote now and anyway roils for an null ;k ndent om-- four years is too long for anybody mv to be hv strike as if to be in th same grade won' ll IV. hec-- for I ' S Stei Washakie Joe beaut v p ( built 1,1 oil'- - IBRIGHT MOMENTS; Lord Byron, the great English poet, was possessed of a great dislike for some of the English gentry. When informed by Sir James Burgess that Napoleon's army had been defeated at Waterloo, and that the Little Corporal was in full retreat to Fans, he remained silent for a moment, then vehemently exclaimed: "I'm dammed sorry for it. I didn't know but that I might live to see Lord Casterleighs head on a pole. But I suppose I shan't now. World subordinates 111 ESA I SKA: A few week after th til' ment, groom begins to wonder all th rush was almtil. pa-,- v : season will be opened soon, arul Lil Gee Gee viys she is going to get her sweetie to touch her to swim again. N ABKi AIL ' in an un- - s. hut a colony of red : ants feel sut the picnic son draws near. to the v. al capaci- Center c'Musical DEFINITION .lo France has for long depended upon her alliances with the little Entente for protection of sort along the Baltic and Adriatic regions. Now, with the little entente wavering on the edge of complete severance of onnections with her protectorate ally, Fram view with alarm the increasing overtures of Italy to the Balkan countries. Kosnh1 War M ichine Whether Home will he sin ful tn its endeavor to sun an alliance, military or othirwiso with the little entente is hugely as the little problematical, little regard tor ltalv lento other than a healthy respect tor have the Italian machine. The seen the handwi it mg in Ethiopia and they have seen the repercus-ansums .and thev dun t liLt the lure, but still, there is a pos for the manufacture of thoe mini Mtuiitv ami it is paits. jut that pos- - mum No xnont'r had he done so, sibil, :y whnh his given rise to tfian he discoveicd that the alarm hi re. The loss of the little prie of alurmnm.i was slow'y beentente the thn.it ot ltalv. tin ing r unill on him He looked into the aluminum bubbling over of Spam s illnev-- , England s monsti oun program anl field, and diMiveied it to he a Gel many s sudden nod .success! monopoly. Now, fin ie tx nothing that Fort! iso to renewed nationalism h;i bet n t!u dt riding factors m Un t'Pes m!e th n menopidv He fix a Let n tlt'Mie to be dependent design of the French m.n liu vx apsycho-logic- In Great Lives is Balkans Alarming to France BY BENJWUX STOt T American Wire Correspondent PARIS. 2o May (American Wire)-Ev- er since the Goths and the Tartars swept down thru Europe in the dark ages. France has been the scapj-goa- t of war. soil has been plowed and blasted with shot and shell and drench-- 1 ed w'lth the blood of her own her enemy's armies until has been born into the French mind, a lasting, unrea- soning fear of Germany. Not that Germany has alwavs been her enemy, but she was m the last war an the memory is yet vivid. Bectfjse of this, th n. France has designed her military machine. A New Threat But there has beer, a inodifu r in this program a new threat. et i V. o fin. v m ti invV liiv ti UK uui s me toward which the Freni h peo- alarm as nowhere near i, . ple have been Inking for the t enough to balaiue the U"t t; two years wtih alarm. fh.tl surroumi them. reading That is Italy. tMOKE) ties) these of HUMOR is no escape Weakening Of Alliances In Editor's Note: This is the seventh of a senes of articles on the armies of the world and the mad armaments race. In this articn Benjamin Stout brings to light the factors in Tie design of the current French war machine. Europe muL France the converging point of all theoretical drivt par WASHINGTON.- - Our CACHE Ford Refused I steps with Rodney Dutcher. The background of the strikes and settlements among the independent steel eotporations stretches behind the memorable negotiations which ended in a collective bargaining agreement between Chairman Myron Taylor of the U. S. Steel Corporation, and Chairman John L. Lewis LTWtrwri of the C. I. O. exA famous folks'. Howdy, Snatches of the true story behind pert proposes that battleships the Taylor-Lewhave epi.sod0 lie abolished en.irely. No doubt, been told, some of them in inaceur-a'- e e eould save a lot of money by version. The full story probably substituting naughts for will never be revealed, because men like Taylor and J. P. Morgan -and men like Lewis have a way The world would be a happier of keeping their secrets. Ask any are if a married mans bank newspaperman account would grow as fast as his Those here in the best position family. to know, however, insist that there were two essential factors hitherto hidden: Paikmjr limit to 15 minutes during the busy shopping hours might wmk; but even then the mote sly parktrs would just sidle out of one spot mto another desirable place, still on the cheating side. A REVEALING STATEMENT " f; Lurking meters might solve the problem, for it would no longer be a pUasiire if U eost money, but path fig meters aren't very popular as was proved by Sait in Utah, Lakt s experience. AUR policy is one of class struggle. Out policy is that U we have nothing in common with employers. There'll come a time when there arent any employing classes any more, and we subscribe and look forward to that day. The above from a speech by Harry Bridges, Pacific coast president of the International Longshoremens association. Perhaps Bridges has made a serious mistake in thus revealing his purposes. Already, there have been many who have been inclined to blame him for costly continuation of the waterfront strike last winter, long after employers had pledged themselves to abide by arbitration by appointees of President Roosevelt, if work could be resumed. Bridges has a perfect right to his belief, of cour.-e- . There are no doubt a great many free citizens of this country who believe that most industry should he owned by governmental bodies, thus displacing private employers. But Bridges views are in the realm of politics, rather than of labor relation- s- and it would seem that Bridges should be in politics rather than in labor. Labor unions have been defined by the New Deal as instruments of collective bargaining. Is Bridges qualified to bargain" with empaners, who he has openly stated he believes in eliminating as a class? Even if t.e United Nates should be on the road to state capitalism, or socialism, as Bridges has in mind, it would seem common sense we should arme there by orderly democratic process and not by the route of economic waste, struggle and destruction resulting from strikes prompted by a leader of collective bargaining pledged to the principle of no bargain. deep-am- ws'.tebasket. sub passed mark. va fmni this menace. 111. 11 Not only L it a problem of making the Mam street a drtaded plai r to walk, but it is unfair that persons wishing to park for a frw minutes m onhr to enter a rtou ait Dirt ml to go blocks out of thmr No. it seems there I Anonymous letter go the - ,m, route, only quicker Years u: 1, have caused me to gauge m, mail backwards ton, ;,s. to the place Wnere the sm,, nm should he. If it is obviously .1 : iks signatu'e, or if signature .s Puking, rot even the f St line ot the lettc-gets lead. That ix just n.j own litth way of jilting even with t.u wntii's of anonymous Utters. Not t ven their litsl line gels acri.s )t. ex1934, after janitor, i a. sale, hasn't tree tu Jo there more than ihuck them m the periments with o r d i n ary fU! Ills c had If a citizen dressed in a bed jects the sheet and a mask approached ni100,000 ton the street and tried to In a report on I'd either run 01 sxk extra - sensory him. He's just not oiang him-elun ler such perception and neither will Dr. Rhine writes; The letter waiter wno hides be"One of the hind the mask and cloak of anonytaken mity holds exactly the same lating was to asce- as the masked individu.il in my rtain whether scheme of things. I don't like him mediums p o at all. rotn-inr- s; i 11 11 BY CLARK SQUIRE American Wire Correspondent After leaving Rockefeller Institute ill New Y'ork, where I discussed with Dr. Alexis Carrel a variety of subjects, including teand hypnolepathy. clairvoyance tism, I went to an apartment 011 Park avenue. There, in her suite on the top floor, I met Mrs. Eileen J. Garrett, widely known medium who divides her time between this country and England. An apfor had made been pointment me through a friend, a surgeon. Worked With Carrel Mrs. Garrett, an attractive woman of middle age, is said to be the only professional mednlm who has engaged in research work with scientists. She has done some experimental work with Dr. she is best Carrel. However, in this respeet for her knowm I a r a p sychological investigations with Dr. J. B. Rhine, associate ptofessor of psychology at Duke university. Her first tests at Duke were made in April, st , A par k g tnste-Jessnes- noon t, Sat url iv IP urn nil liay Su in ft V if ii.i.s tor t.H IMlrOuJ fiM lay hin'N hr ker-crum- -i orange-colore- w U r -- hard-workin- oW nvi i lupped-cream-and- ,, yield to no man as mils would phrase il in mg the full imirtesim nt ra.Miin 10 any human la may politely add' ess or in w uu mi m If any there be who in;! loss of time to t (inverse 01 spond with strangers, (hen ,, ing to such a b dgeil 1 am i, on he debit side anil will be able to set my an bums For many ye irs ihe tilm,, brought me great gobs (, trom prisons unknown In m, from points sprinkled wnbi ,;i over the earth s surta e u Tile honest letters ij answer almost nluav, g, mi letters Many requite They meiely recoid a f.n an press opinion, and the w thereof neither expect nut w,. answer. They have express, q selves, and that is enough letter I mean By "honest that mean what they s.c. which bear an honest sign .t ,, Sarcastic letters or those th it ,1, written in a spirit of pine me,;,, ness only hesitate a niomcn' m. t their way to my a ,i,. I it prize-winne- 1879, FIRING THE REBELLION ON Glances At Reporter Our World This is the fifth of a series articles by Clark Squire, American Wue, correspondent, based on his recent visit to Ntw Yoik where he interviewed I)r. Alexis Carrel, noted scientist ami Nobel After Dr Carrel expressed his faith in telepathy, the reporter obtained an interview with Mrs. Elieen Garrett, with whom Dr. J. B. Rhine, associate professor of psychology at Duke university, reobtained such marvelous sults 111 telepathy experimentation. matter at the postoffbe Entered as second-clas- s at Logan, Utah, under the Act uf Cungi rsa, MarcQ 3, and "The Liberty Sell. ter of ice, Western New spaperg. I X-Repor- 1 i t d olein ill Still With t j n't tn h pimp's, Mr i i It t'ntirnt to B : VMHK1 t cm- - tin Inst nf NOT CilILTY out UMIUM mriuhl; a contract with the "',i B ibt li ul in Mmihl;M of SALT LAKE CTT f May 2a ,M William o'uji m UGiitn-.- . uminc tiiliMO Uiitokqm mine '1 Dlvi it tine time But union leader, was free lit today o! i.tut' lnDj niMiuited his own barges of manslaughter. He was h it the join third defendant to he acquit'an comjunv union u fo! r one an tell how ted m the "party death" of Mrs. ton- - ;i rai!v it Donna Lmdx.iv, his wile. t ! t Utah-Idah- extra-sensor- Extra-sensor- y y 1 x I c' at i iTT gently cleanses the intestines. also furKelloggs All-Branishes vitamin B to tone up the intestines and iron for the blood. Just eat two tablespoonfuls day, as a cereal with milk or creni or rooked into appetizing muffins nrt aus, etc. Three times daily m n rr holt , t usual degree, if they possessed them at all, and whether their orcontrol trance personalities Thomas Hart Benton, the American statesman, ha' .1 habit of could demonstrate similar powers. rubbing himself daily with a stiff folbristled brush immediately "This step was carried out with lowing his bath. Th marvel of Mrs. Garrett, who kindly and cou- it was that his friends assured rageously volunteered for the re- him that were they to use the search. The results of this inves- same method they would cry tigation showed that Mrs. Garrett bloody murder when the brush did have capacities for telepathic touched them. To one and all Benton had the same answer, and clairvoyant perception. Uninterested in Seances namely: "The Roman gladiators Experiments in telepathy and did it, sir. clairvoyance were made while Mrs. Garrett was in a trance and LARGE ACREAGE also while in her normal state. Most of the work was with cards SALT LAKE CITY, May 25 d li five different symbols. bearing Nearly 24,000 acres more than Frof Rhine explained the results in the Scientific American for was planted last year, have been contracted for the growing of suJuly, 1935. Mrs Garrett is not interested gar beets in western states sugar o in seances. There is too much companies announced today. faker connected with thp business, Sugar company has conin her opinion. She explained how tracted 72,500 acres and Gunnison has contracted she conducts her card tests and Sugar company gave me a park of 5u with which 7030 acres. Of the acreage more So far, I havent than 21.0X) are in Utah. to experiment. found anyone who can approach her record. a roan, no one knows. Mrs. Garrett makes no attempt For several minutes Mrs. Garto explain her rett continued the demonstration, perception. She discovered she pos- giving information about other sessed it in girlhood and has members of the family sufficient to convince us she possesses an accepted it in a matter-of-famanner. uncommon power. She showed a book of newspaper perception, as Dr. Some told her predicRhine defines it, is "reception of clippings. an unknown form of energy by an tion of the dirigible disaster unknown mode." It is something in France in October, 1930. Forty-siwliuh involves the nervous syswere killed. "Do you foresee any similar distem quite as much as it does any aster in the near future? I asked. cognitive process." Between now und the end of "A person may discuss this subject for hours, but I find that the the yeur, tragedy will overtake Mrs. most convincing argument is that one of the Clipper ships," of demonstration," Mrs. Garrett Garrett replied. said, ami proceeded to give one. ,Addt exsing Mrs. Squire, she said; Described Father When you entered and I took NOBODY ENJOYS vour hand. I had certain perceptions. I cannot say whether they came through telepathy or clairTAKING MEDICINE! voyance " The medium presently described Mrs. Squire's father, the nature ill Ills work m early life and just i mr to his death, his facial ex-Yet most people at some tint css. mix and some of his rhar-isuffer from common constipation. We thought she was eristics. not correct this condition the decidedly wrong in one statement: Why ready-to-eThat m his younger days he rode natural way by including a meals cereal with your daily a roan horse. However, sinee returning home I have learned that instead of taking weakening pills he did mic a horse, but whether and drugs? adds the Kelloggs All-Bra- n bulk the average system needs. absorbs In the body. All-Bra- n twice its weight in water, forming which a soft, spongelike muss Schilling pepper oorriiTTiirT'TiTq severe eases. All-Brais sold at all groeeis. 'Jade and qiomi ntced by Kellogg in lkitllu Creek. n |