OCR Text |
Show U$& THE HER PAGE TWO. A LOGAN, L, UTAH, SIDEGLANCES The ppi HERALD-JOURNA- Metr.her United Press, American Wire, NEA Service, Western Features and The Scripps League of Newspapers. Entered as at Logan, Utah Bell. matter at the postoffice under the Act of Congress March s second-clas- S, 1879. will not assume financial responsibility for The Herald-Journany errors which rnay appear in advertiseraen s published in its columns. In these instances where the taper is at fault, it will reprint that part of the advertisement in which Iho typographical mistake occurs. TIIK PATMAN HILL FRANKLY, says Cuiigicssman Wright Ratn...:., the I object of this bill is to causo a law to bo enacted that will restrict retail distribution to a small area and to a eoniparatiely small number of units. in tlu Congressional In an extension of remarks Record, he was speaking of house resolution !)Hil, which store hill. is known as the national After the war between the states, he argues, congress deliberately passed a law placing a prohibitive tax on notes, currency issued by state banks. Another case is the oleomarga ine tax laws." And so forth. Mr. latman believes that that ageney which has done the most to ierfoot distribution methods and thus redue costs for the ultimate consumer should now, because it piovides such acute competition in the form of low prices, be legislated out of existence. He is saying, irtually, that it is triminal to buy and sell the necessaries of life in such large quantities that costs are cut for the individual pun baser. And this in the face of the fact that the independent or stores all over America are continually forming themselves into leagues and associations to achieve that same g g and potent power. Mr. I 'atman urges that this acute business competition on the part of the chain stores is stiffling local initiative and enterprise, when, as a matter of fact, it is teaching local individuals and groups the very science of effective, vigorous business. "Lower costs and wider distribution is on of the of the national administration of which Mr. latman n store tax bill would make is a part. Yet his those vital factors against the law. believes passage of the Iatman The Herald-Journbill would harm all business, and thus the nation. anti-chai- n non-cha- in cheaj-sellin- cheap-buyin- sol-ga- ns anti-chai- al CHICKEN IN THE ROAD A new' answer does the chicken cross the road? :w IItoYthe old To accidents. cause be might question In Oregon a man is killed when lie runs his car into a river to avoid hitting a duck waddling across the highway. The same day, at Zoarville, Ohio, six automobiles crashed and several persons were injured when one motorist skidded his car to avoid striking a dog. As s)eed increases the danger to humans also grows every time the car deviates in the slightest from the highway. It is right to think of the welfare of animals, and to drive at speeds which will allow' you to do so, but every driver should weigh the chances of injuring other humans before taking risks to protect the lives of creatures in the road. Rest safety measure of all would be for owners to keep their dogs, chicken, cows or ducks off of the road. An artificial blood vessel just invented for experimental purposes is made of rubber tubing, and so is quite lymph. Three artificial limbs have been stolen from a Philadelphia firm. Police are looking for three gents who are sorely in need of alibis, not having a leg to stand on. Glances At Our World will be no rest for the book publishers in this next year m or mi Soirieiset Maugham, his ''The Summing Up," has mad'- - book writing look pitifully easy. And if one tires of book writing one merely eoeks one's pen at another angle and dashes (iff a dozen successful pluys- - or so it would seem. Oh, ho warns of the frightful hardships at first. One of his earliest hooks was flatly rejected. and he i ume very nearly Laving to boriow money to live on at one time between successful plays. Rain", The man who wrote "Of Human "Lady Bondage, Fredera k" and many other lop nonchalantly, hits, lived gaily, met "the best people," traveled Id studied hard over. He the win and worked hard at his writing is int the hare, too, hut that impression the thousands of subscribers to Literary Guild books and other readers of his best seller will chiefly absorb. is "The No, Summing Up perhaps one of the least discouraging books ever written, so far as literary novices are concerned I predict a great boom in the sale of ink, typewriters and paper. it excellent I found reading, and in the book some choice morsels I enjoyed his deln ate flavin of those writers, now happily becoming evtinit, who use words Unit a reader in such fashion must strain and struggle to "understand them, to Iiud ''the hidthat they forever den meaning imply is concealed in ttieir works Always. 1 ve felt that way myself, but wondered if perhaps it wasn't my own shortcoming. Speaking nf Hazlitt, unpleasant as a man but writer of divinely golden thoughts. Maugham writes: "And the man within Us is as true in reality as the man. pitiful and halting, of our Oh. wise, wise outward seeming man. Truer, 1 say A lot truer. Maugham has not been able to find God. I'm sorry to sav. He wanted to see Him with his eyes, feel Him with his hands, and hear Him with his ears. And, of course, he couldn't. "God is a .Spirit, and one who knew him best, "and they that worship Him must worship Him in spirit and in truth." Maugham is able to believe in his own immortality, however. He remarks that now that he is in his 60s the critics call him And I wonder if 'superficial. the very ultimate in superficiality is not bclieveing in one's own immorality but not that of a divine Creator. Tin-r- SCIENCE NEWS Farmers muy soon be able to turn on the automatic milking machine in the dairy barn and then go on about their chores until they hear the whistle blow. A patent has just been granted on a milking machine that whistles when the cow has finished giving milk. It will also signal if one of the vacuum cups Becomes disloged from the cow's udder. 4 Judge Stump Says I'LL RAVE TO 4kKT?y "ME M07HS limcm AWHNly-IRIS- . N Telt- - close Take IgETtHQt y-- C Doctor of the Mind I 17 Looking-glasse- s. pronoun. 27 Males. 28 Back. 29 Gibbon. 30 To employ. P'o M.cricto Llo Rl 41 Sheltered place. 42 Fabulous bird. analyzing life. 58 His theory attaches importance . to 44 Curse. 46 Side bone. 48 Cardinal number. VERTICAL Sofa. 31 Fearful. 2 Wrath. 32 Last word of 3 To depart. a prayer. taining ipecac 4 One. 34 By. 55 Fortified 5 Neither. work. 6 Gablet. 36 Part of a 7 Woods plant. 56 Regrets. circle. 38 Snouts. 57 He developed 8 Electrical unit 9 Rubber tree. 40 Southeast. methods for 51 Beverage. 53 Shrub con- 1 9 .5 8. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO000 MERRY-GO-ROUN- D : 10 11 13 15 from page one) ond most populous State in the the FHA guaranteeing 80 per tent Union, he was a very real possi- of the mortgage. bility for 1940 . Miles L. Colean. Deputy AdminBut all that is finished. Today, istrator of the FHA, frankly adas a potential national candidate, mits that tne Crossett houses are Earle Is deader than a kippered "company houses and that the herring. corporation could evict a tenant because of union activity. Colean UlA AND EOLITH'S The question of whether the hastens to add, however, that the unorganized and the WlA should engage in politics town ishasstillreceived no complaints FHA developed considerable inner friction before the Mississippi State as yet from workers. What would happen- - if unionGuide went to press. Cause of the friction was Mrs. Ellen Wood- ism does come to the town, he wards insistence that the Guide was asked, "and the company be used to give a puff to Demo- in an effort to smash it starts cratic politicos in the State, in- throwing union workers out of these houses? cluding herself. "I don't know," replied Colean, As Assistant Administrator of WPA, and boss of the Federal shrugging his shoulders. "Would the FH X have any auWriters Project, Mrs. Woodward, an appointee of Senator Pat Har- thority to step in and stop that rison, was in a position to lay sort of thing? "I don't think so, Colean redown the law. In other Guides, WPA editors plied. "Our interest is solely of a have taken pains to be nonpar- financial nature. We have r ithing tisan. In writing about Dutchess to do with labor policies." SCARED STIFF County, New York, they made only a passing historical reference to The flowers may bloom in the homestead. the Roosevelt But spring, tra-lbut not for Senwhen copy was being prepared ator George of Georgia. for the Mississippi Guide, Mrs. The sonorous Georgain has far Woodward let it be known that more serious matters on his mind she wanted the book to boost these days; specifically, his chancall good Democrats, including W'P-in view of the es for staff workers. smashing New Deal victory in Her insistance resulted in this Florida. reference to herself in the chapter George has been one of the on Oxford, Mississippi: "Of Senmost persistent Administration ator Sullivan's five children, only foes in Congress, but until the his daughter, Ellen Sullivan WoodFlorida primary it looked like he ward, has followed in his foot- might slip through without oppoof electThen her it tells steps. sition. Since the election, however, ion to the State Legislature, the the New Dealers have been makefof of outstandcareer a beginning ing strenous ing service to her State in key forts to get a candidate into the positions." field against him and George is This and other puffs were in- scared stiff. cluded over the protest of editors He is so jittery that when sevwho wanted to keep contemporary eral of his conservative pals appoliticial figures out of the book. proach him on the plan to filNote Aside from the above ibuster against the wage-hou- r bill, political bias the Guide is a high- he excitedly told them he would ly creditable piece of work. have nothing to do with the U. S. scheme although he bitterly opCOMPANY TOWN The U. S. Housing Authority is posed the original measure. not the only federal agency proThere is very good reason for George's fright. Georgia is conviding government funds for em- ceded to be one of the strongest housing for eheap-iubo- r States in the South, ployers. cand Recently this column revealed and a White that the Housing Authority had didate would just about spell finearmarked (900,000 for workers ish for George. Roosevelt's choice to run against dwellings in Gadsden, Ala., which would help the Goodyear Tire George is Governor Ed Rivers. MAIL BAG and Rubber Company to move facL. C. V., Baltimore Newspaper tories out of Akron, O., where labor is unionized. But it now reports that Secretary Hull condevelops that the Authority was sidered resigning originated from a piker compared to the Federal a private talk he had with three newspaper friends, one of them Housing Administration. For FT1A has underwritten the being Fred Essary of The Balticonstruction of an entire company more Sun. During this discussion town in Crossett, Ark., a little Hull spent almost thirty minutes community which to all intents raging against unfavorable press and purposes is owned by the reports about him resulting from the Spanish embargo and shipCrossett Lumber Company. The Crossett project consists of ment of arms to Germany. The y 199 frame houses and Secretary was in one of his angritwo stores. The houses, containing est moods but said nothing about 710 rooms, rent for an average of resigning. The story got distorted $8.29 a month to Negro families later and was published by a coland $17.88 to white tenants. The league of Essary's in The Baltiproject was financed by the com- more Evening Sun. Relations bepany through three banks, with tween Hull and Sumner Welles, he went to a military academy. behind-the-scen- Behind The Scenes In Washington WASHINGTON. Some very reasons figure in the dehill adtermination of wage-hou- r vocates to struggle to the last tor a niqpsurc from the House this session. Among the reasons is a general belief that the Senate - which bill last year passed a wage-hou- r and would have to be asked to do so again next winter if there were no enactment by the present Con-g- i ess - wouldn't pass such a "good" bill next time. The Senate has become more independent since the depression began. But the chief loss there to the wage-hou- r forces came with elevation of Senator Hugh Black, former chairman of the Senate Court. Black was a fighter and although the original administration bill was torn to pieces he managed to pilot a iarger part of it through than a less vigorous leader could have done. The present committee chairman is Senator Elbert I. Thomas, the Utah scholar, who is sincere and able, but lacks furee. There are no other strong wage-hou- r battlers among the committees Democratic .IK-rm- l members. The Senate bill set up standards of 40 cents an hour and 40 hours a week, to he administered by a board which would be empowered to make exceptions. Further, it's orthodox wage-hou- r bill theory that such a law would aid recovery by increasing purchasing power and protecting many "legitimate business men f r om s w e atshop competition. Twenty-tw- o Pennsylvania congressmen have signed a petition claiming that thousands of workers in their state have lost jobs lately when industries moved to other states to pay lower wages. Some advocates believe passage bill would cause of a wage-hou- r e a spurt of production in industries, somewhat similar to that preceeding NBA codes in 1933 low-wag- There isn't any Austria in Europe any more, but the Department of Agriculture is making sure that there will be a little bit Seaweeds. His nation. ality, Therefore. He has attained Dear Judge; woild , Ever know a moth that didnt 17 Genus of prefer the new clothes ill hiiv rodents. closet? I. H. (i. 18 South Ajax, the mammoth moth in m.v America. Uncle Sorghum's closet, turned to the old clothes in his seventh sum21 Sailor. mer. He was always a daredevil 25 Values, i wouldn't consider eating his way 26 Hell. thru a garment even in his declin27 Resembling ing years. So he hunted up the a wall. old clothes and continued to fly 29 Part of mouth hear-othru the thin spots. 33 Cause. STUMP 35 To ebb. 37 To repurchase 39 Male child. 43 Ringlet. 44 Company. 45 Morindin dye, 46 Edge of skirt. 47 Writing tool. n of it in America. Rangers and guides of the Forest Service will he equipped with green Tyrolean hats to replace of the army camp ugn they now wear It isn't planned to provide them with yodels. Yielding will he optional with the 1ndm1lu.il. t'i. top-piec- DR. HUGO HCKKNKR, the Zepman. who is about as pelin popular a figuie as llerr Hitlir could have chosen to come over and try to pry some helium loose from governmental officials, will soon be in Washington wheedling But Eekener is likely to run into a stone wall in the person of HOLD EVERYTHING 49 Myself. 50 Sun god. Dyewood tree Onager. 54 Preposition. 56 Musical note. 51 52 Secretary of the Interior Harold L. li kes. Helium for Germany happens to he an emotional issue with Iekes, and he would have let the stuff go long before this of German planes hadnt bombed Barcelona babies and German troops hadn't taken over Austria with subsequent cruelties to Jews. Roosevelt has given Iekes permission to handle the situation as he thinks best And if Eekener hopes to cure the secretary's case of writers' camp he will have to see the heud man and get him to change his mind. Copyright, Inc.) NEA 1938, Service, in California was kicked by a dying mule, and St. Louis votes that the most annoying noise is a rooster's crow, and there certainly ought to be material for Republican cartoonist in that pair of items. A man man was held up with a beer bottle the other day, and don't think he isn't mad as hops. A low-co- st House-endorse- one-stor- lichr O o o a cSOOSOOSOOSOOOOOOCooo Howdy, folks! Fi !um has been left to The opem Lil sas Gee Gee more than that of her relations. - Many also a esian eat 0 was 01 id in Rj ginal the natu leniitd eon u it would to iinj.i Mill. hands make good jackpot ABIGAIL The com ork jtherman trd the su APILEs,K one 1 jmest sp SEZ; ;h arc cleverer nH .7 , mother m i..r hold safety pins and a her mouth at til sain,. our. Women The numb ,e farmer 1, - , in famous moving p tress has been maria times, and all her husb.n.i A been t named A cnly ion. e Bill im: ADDLED AXIOM Homo is where the gage is. ai. iase Rear t1 .ent for Xorth Ca M,PS imrt- judging Duie. .am, " or ore of 131 t n points; ?h school, 65 0. High pom rson of th 480 pi plow m. th 465 pc The Then theres the story of the Scotchman whose wife hail tuinv two can live i heap. because than one. the world might Suppose all the sixophoni.sts played, xylophones. nthfield leader th a sco I jb of ,,dmore ,ce with High pot 1 of Smt .land Do Well, m - one YE DIARY Betimes home, anil to shruiin Little Homer how to bang hv hn knees from she horizontal Inn in the Imek yard, but Lord! ulirn I do put my knees over the Imr, and hang head downwards, 1 heroine so dizzy, I do fall on nij head, whereat Little Homer doth break out into gales of laughter, which make me mighty wroth, and I do vow I will shew him no more tricks, which doth give nie a good out, for these old iHines. heaven help me, be too brittle for such antieks. oils. Results his Under Secretary, have been extremely friendly and minus an), friction whatsoever. M.W. Cherry-dalewas Ya. There nothing phony about the Pulitzer story of Arthur Krork crack New York Times correspondent. His newspaper interview with Roosevelt resulted from a session with the President, who later corrected the story in his own handwriting Even the headlines were okayed by the White House in advance two-ho- of publication. mMu Ogi Junior e hool. .bon, Col Grand Glson, Co George 1. t ond. 1 Spackr t. Plowm 1A1 -- Jkv Roy I 1 Vanec D 3 N. uith, Rie 1. (gden 3. Roy s Indust 1. 1 George C. S. 3. .1 Indust 2 Plowm 3 Ross ( 1 Ml 5 Indust Georg' Leon Andre 2. 3 4. 9nCOAuhJL BOV 19 3ft Your AGGRESSIVE. will determine vuur pruerrv in 193K! Gains or losses wlU I eoverned largely by the fleht you make for MuKK btiainr. Some wifi find hard 2. Georg I ond. 3 Indust 4. Guy I 3 ADVERTISING NE8 3. Claret Andre Plowr 4 C. 1 Sehoo 1 2 sledding" during the nest twelve months. Others will see the 4 Ilowr 1. Andre Andre 2. The safest assurance of a GOOD vear In l(m Is AGGRESSIVE. NESS and the safest, most profitable form of AGGRt S. the con. siefent use of NKHH. PAPER AI1 EK IS-- I NO to reai h and In. fluence present and DoteotlaJ customers. I. NEKS Is 1 3 C. 4 Srhoo 1 Ross 2. Sehoij 3 Andn 4 Plow Indu- 2 P.i,s, 3 C. S 4 Gcoi t LET A. II. C. IIEIOIITS SHOW f THE WAY TO SUMMER VALUE 1. Indie 2 LeP.o 3 Plow 4. Si hoi 1. Clare Geor; Indu 2 3. Indu1 Si hoi 2 Get your moneys worth when buying advertising in 3 Ross 1. Ross 193S! Make every advertising dollar bring MAXIMUM RESULTS! A noted advertising expert says The first step In advertising effectively is to determine the people who can use your products or patronize vnur store, where they are to lie found and the BEST METHOD OF CATCHING TIIEIR EYE AND AROUSING TIIEIR INTEREST. FULL MEASURE advertising local and national advertisers and advertising agencies have discarded guesswork in favor of FACTS yes s,,PPlicd Py AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS REPORTS. Our A. B. C. RETORTS are always ready for your to show you the way to more effective, more advertising in I'jJS! Herald-Journacorn i9a I still say wc V by nf srovtcr inc biiietl S 1 To simplify the securing of honest value 5 S 5 gden. i Hnss 3 C S. year bring RIGGER OM MR. BIUORR PROFIT In which group will you Ml Y 4 Oarer 1. 2. Si ho 3. Pluw 1 Indu 2 Plow 3 Russ Fred 2 Geor 1 sin 3 v. cyw-- J 1 Ross 1 School 1. 1. Make sure that the advertising medium you select will carry your advertising messages to the right number of right people in tire right way at the right cost! t el Senior e 2 v The second step," says this expert, "is to determine how to reach the largest number of desirable prospects at the least cost." ' 0 ( tin 3, Ouch! 1A1 sec hool, - No, Cuthbert, hay few, ,, ni)t a heart trouble caused b f i!hng in love with a grass wide Don't 'put all your eggs basket try an incubator the success nite days, judges wi r county f tor pessimist is a man mm the ruction in ri who 5 Diting thn In William Just a regular annual Frid j itwn unuersity fop the of human relations. A Mr. Grisby doesn't know Low to relax Vinr Q o o o a, . 19 Tree. 20 Street. 21 Mongrel. 22 To scold. 23 Tone B. 24 A monster. 26 Masculine George Clark 1 (Continued 1 HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 1, 7 The man called father R0Nto of psychosAPPLE analysis. 11 Pertaining STjl to air. PlEiE NiSUSltTQjOiLn? 12 Hangmans PA b E S 0L.I I IE Qa! L lb halter. iJptoY 14 To twist. QM'aWa ajflb U M 16 Indian. PlUE!R0eIU, 16, ter Price 5 cents a copy. By mall, In Cache Valley, $4.00 a yenr; outside Cache Valley, (5.00 a year. By carrier, 45 rente a month, (5.00 a year. Proclaim Liberty Thru All the Land. The Liberty By X-Repor- L afternoon by the Cache Published every week-da- y Valley Newspaper Co., 73 West Center Street, Logan, Utah. Telephone 50, Mi torn MAY MONDAY. l 4. 4 representative ot tills nettinaper will Eladlv explain full de. tails of our latert A. B. C. RUOKT and heln vou plan an rf. flclent. effective and K economical 1938 vcrtlslni proermn. ad 1 L'te 2 Geor E ( Ned 3 4 3 1 2. 3 4 Grot Will Guv F ', 1 Ned 3 U ill 3 Dali 4 l',-,- 2 Guv 3 Rv H 1 u 2 M i, 3 J ' G.o 4 something hack there, George! V.d D I. ) Mat ....... nmmmm |