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Show Magna, Utah, Friday, June 26, 1936 AMERICAS GAME - POLITICS - Senator Copeland' decision to "take a walk" has started something. Many other Democrats have decided to follow jpmd with them will go at least a few voters In November. During the week and probably extending over the week end the New Dealers will burn the midnight oil hoping to stem the stampede. In all probability, Charley Michelson will try to divert the attention of the public by attempting to crash page one with something far removed from the tender spot. downstairs. Unfortunately 1940 is too distant. The public wants relief now and not in the form of boondoggling experiments and unheard of extravagances. Farley is also being haunted by another nightmare: the possibility of a third party by the Coughlin followers, the Townsendltes and the advocates. If such a group were to put up its own candidate many a vote for the New Deal would go by the board. Such a movement could not hurt the aspirations of the Republicans but it might raise havoc in other directions. Share-the-weal- th One thing w hich stands out above everything else Is the sound AmerRe' Farley and his henchmen are suf- ican doctrines embodied in the we a fering from an acute attack of the publican platform. For change Jitters. The unanimity displayed at actually fincf politicians planning IllCleveland was too much for them. for the country and not for an interna-tlonalstbewide Impossible a open split usory. Utopian. expected They oasis. tween the Old Guard and the young, As many an acute observer has liberal element of the Republican said: "Before we attempt to reform party. broom But all was harmony. If the Re- the world, let us get out the, ' publican voters support the Lon- and clean our own house." don and Knox ticket in a body there can be no doubt as to the election. Representative Dlcksteln, of New But no matter what the result, the Yoik, is itching for another investiactivities." country can be assured of a change gation of in 1940. The public will be so stuffed lie was aroused, as we all wertj, by with New Deal "Isms," that it will the fanatical black legion. lc cry surfeit" and kick the planners main targets arc Nazis and If activities are to be investigated why not get some one who will view these activities with a broad mind? Singling out the Nazis, whom we deplore, will not get us very far. If such an investigation la ordered, why not include the Communists, the parlor pinka, the aliens illegally in this country, .the pacifists who would disarm the country and the war hawks who want to over-arIt? ed m There will be plenty of hard hitting when the campaign formally gets underway this summer. CoL Knox, perhaps the foremost foe of the New Deal in the country,,-wil- l carry the battle into the enemy's select government of America. They govrepresentatives to conduct their ernment for them. They want to know who wUl best represent them, serve ,nd what policies will best newspabuy interests. They their and pers so they may be informed, which in they one newspaper Adthe Meanwhile we can expect the confidence (the ministration to call upon our am- have the greatest to which they look one newspaper bassadors, ministers extraordinary midanee is information and plenipotentiary to return home tor one the armor and clad themselves in battle to their for the big fray. rural The would we One person to particular wUl determtoe who rfmU ho the like to hear is Claude O. Bowers, fthe UdState now ambassador to Spain, former next hold theories which already have been invalidated by the Supreme Court then we may expect to see some of the leading, walking Democrats go the limit for the G. O. P. ticket. Pent Hearst editorial writer and noted of the Western political historian. Union Syndicate. paper Bowers has few equals in this country as a speaker and will give his Republican foes a ryirYOT their Loans To money. camp. Oov. London win be expected to make his trips to key points in the East, and the Far West, but the Rough Riding publisher will do the real heavy campaigning. Who occupies the White House Whether or not these Democrats for the next four years beginning who have decided to take a walk next January will depend very larwUl do any stumping for the G. O. gely on the people of rural AmerP. is stin a matter of conjecture. As ica the people of the smaller cit- Governor fay pointed out recently, the town, ami it wUl all depend on the stand which re present the larger portion the New Dealers take at Philadel- intelligent vote of the nation. They think. They vole for the man and phia. If there is any sniping at the Con- measures they believe represent the stitution or if the Democratic plat- best interests of America as a whole form contains planks which are re more than selfish thetom .Jht, Representative MADDEN VOYAGE KATHLEEN Copyright, Kathleen Norrla CHAPTER XXIII Continued 35 She Imagined Larry, tall anil grown Snd frowning and worried seeing to all the details, talking And things over with Caroline. all tbs time the old mother would ba placid and comfortable In her sunshiny room upstairs, looking wonderlngly at the faces of her burses; smiling eagerly when they brought her her lunch tray and began to feed her. Mrs. Patterson had had a slight stroke. Tony wrinkled her brnw trying to remember how long ago. They had gone to China, and after leisurely visits to Hongkong, Kobe, Pekin, had gone on ' through the Sues canal to Marseilles. That had been late summer time. It was more than a year ago. Then In October, Idling at Nice, Larry had been seriously ill, and afterward Mrs, Patterson had been stricken down. Immediately Ruth, always theTV voted daughter, had rented a villa, had established the whole family comfortably within. Larry was writing letters for some syndicate; was writing a book. He had been badly pulled down by his Illness; It had been sUne low troublesome form of and if had loft him weak and Caroline wrote Joe amusing accounts of his willingness to Inxy. bo managed, to be Idle. Tony had never seen Nice; she visualised It as host she could. A of Mediterranean shore; big hotels close to the wa ter; villas setup ou the steep hare hills. scimitar-swee- Now they would give up the villa or could they, with Ruths old mother installed there, perhaps not well enough to move? Tony would hav a letter gome day; anjr day. there was no hurry, and then she would know all about everything. Meanwhile, there was the office. There were dull days and exciting days; there was always much gossip and rumor to consider, and the affair to watch. Mae Ethyl was wearing white furs now. and had moved from the family domicile In Inglelle Terrace to a small apartment downtown. "It seemed better for me to be nearer my work," said Mae Ethyl. For the rest, there was the home apArtmeut, comfortable enough with Its hooka aqd damps, with Asterbel doing almost all the work nowadays, and there were Bruce's Interests to follow; Bruce was a sophFitch-Muzz- omore at the state university . and came home only for There were Aunt Meg. affectionate and amusing and loyal, and occasional encounters with magnificent Aunt Sally, and happy visits with Brenda. Rremla'a second boy. George Alvin Atwater, Junior, wns only a few weeks older than Cliff's baby daughter; Cliff and week-ends- Mary-Ros- came down to Pacific-Gro- ve for ClltTa vacation, and the sisters and brother and the small cousins had happy hours together. Alvin had been put on the hospital staff and was building up a good prac- tice. CHAPTER XXIV times In this strange Interval were epentwith Joe, to hla Isolated faftn house on the cliffs. From this base he made many of his Investigations among the pools and rocks of .the shore, tut he bad had time to beatify the place too, and most of the changes were made at Tonys suggestion. had designed the i Together they great fireplace at the end of the sitting room, and together bad shared the first successful fire therein. A gracious wide terrace, flagged in terracotta red, had been opened t the fouth aide f the bouse; the npONTS happiest , News- - well-kno- w 12 REASONS - AND 0NEM0RE Why use newspaper advertising Thomas F. Barnhart, advertkh specialist and associate professor Journalism at the University Minnesota gives 13 pertinent r zona They are; I. Newspaper reading is w versal habit. Newspaper adverts tag, therefore, reaches virtually n who read and buy, . "2.A newspaper advertisement tm always be seen by the read 3. The newspaper advertisement as part of the complete paper into the home as a welcome 4. The newspaper advertisement can have aa much news value ana reader interest as the news item 5. The amount of text used ta newspaper advertisements is dependent only upon the size of the space. 6. Newspaper, advertising is tkt Mr. and Mrs. Samuel M. Bullock II. Newspaper circulation t ( of Bacchus announce the arrival known. and is comparatively unaf. of a baby boy born Thursday, June fected by daily change. 18 at the L. D. S. Hospital. Mother 12. Nearly all of a newspaper and baby are doing very nicely. circulation is concentrated tat kta own market 13. Newspaper advertising reduce Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Kearns and family have returned from a weeks selling costs because it entails at waste ta circulation. This helps revacation spent in Sterling, Utah. duce costs for the consumer. Mr. and Mrs. John Sevan announce the birth of a fine baby boy born in the L. D. S. Hospital. Mother and new arrival are doing very Mrs. Ace Zenger entertained at a nicely. luncheon last Thursday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Walter Coon and at her home for a group, of friends family left Sunday for a weeks vaMrs. Beth Long entertained at a cation in Los Angeles. California. GARFIELD NOTES credit. m lams on a short trip to Rock Spring Friday. Dr. Herbert B. Maw, and versatile speaker from Salt Lake SunCity, will be the guest speaker day evening at the Garfield L. D. S. ward meeting, 7:00 p. m., announces authorities. Dr. Maw will speak on a vital and Interesting topic of the day. Every- lble. 7. Newspaper advertising i , one is Invited to attend. Musical quickly controlled. numbers will also Mae given. 8. Newspaper advertising may be adjusted to different conditions MAGNA NOTES 9. Newspaper advertising an.Kfr, manufacturers and dealers to state One of the social events of the where their products may be bought 10. Newspaper advertising is week was the marriage of Mrs. Eliza h. Bateman to Earl Curel Wittaker. expensive. Merchants have learned The ceremony took place Wednes- that it covers more families for fea money than any other form of day In Salt Lake City. m hoit-ter- on DR. HERBERT MAW GARFIELD SPEAKER SUNDAYJtOO P. M. Loans made to farmers and livestock growers in Utah from May 1, 1933, until last March 31, totalled $21,462,631, Allen T. Sanford. state director of the national emer- Wormed Tues-farm credit admlnistra- y tion. Altogether 13.634 loans were made during the period, according Jo the report. Of the total. $12,144,700 represented 5573 federal land bank and land bank commissioner loans, made on ;egsy terms of iong.time mortgages on farm properties. association credit Production loans, 941 in all, represented $7,237,-06- 1 of the total, and the remainder, $2,044,600, covered 7120 emergency crop and drouth relief loans. Production credit loans were made for short terms, with low interest rates charged. Utah is one of tour states comprising the eleventh tarm credit administration district, Mr. Sanford said. In the country as & whole, there are 12 districts, providing a complete and coordinated credit si stem for agriculture by making and availab!e to farmers long-ter- -- good-nature- The the Bible passage: "Wherefore layall guile, ing aside all malice, and and hypocrisies, and envies, and all evil speakings. As newborn babes, desire the sincere milk of the word, that ye may grow thereby (I Peter 2:1,2); and the following correlative from the Christian Science textbook, Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures." by Mary Baker as Eddy: Willingness to becomes a little child and to leave the old for the new, renders thought receptive of the advanced idea. p. 323.) Livestock Men And Growers Are Listed ,y is from Matthew 13:33. also Includes lesson-serm- Farmers, pugnant to the Constitution or if reasons Dlckstelns the platform again attempts to up- this rural vote is the rural news- of each community. It Is a and Georgia asleep in hla shabby paper home Institution. Its readers know coach beeide them. and respect its editor. The people At noon Sundays Joe's car albelieve what they read in its colways twinkled up; sometimes they were all invited to lunch; usually umns to a greater extent than in NOIKIUS he and Tony went off contentedly what they may read In the columns of any other publication. It is the WWTJ Service. together. "The marrledest people that aver werent married I Brenda guiding hand of the people in the to Irritation. What community for which it is published. commented, sitting room and' dining room tost she's thinking of, not to take Joe I The province of the newspaper something of their bozllke stiffness Before Roth's death, when she through the line of French floor had put this question directly to Is to give its readers the Informawindows, and the gay striped awn- Tony, Tony had answered, "1 dont tion upon which the people can base ing over the terrace sent a mellow know, Bendy. I'm crazy, I guess. their actions, to determine how to light through them both. Joe's ten thousand timei too good Vote. It is the province of each edTony knew the little domain for me or any woman. He flasn't itor to determine for himself which thoroughly now. She knew where a fault, that I can see. He'i always party and which candidate repre- the salt box stood In the kitchen, always Intelligent, al- sent the best interests of the peo-- . nnd bow quickest to set the table cheerful and hospitable and pie of his community and the na- ways with' the blue' cups" and 'dragon affectionate and Interested." Won, to give his readers the result plates that had come from San After Ruth's death she no longer of his decision, and to present his I'rauclsco's Chinatown. She and Joe readers with such reliable informahad many busy hours together. said this or said much at all. There tion as will give them an opporIn her eyes; a was light After Ituth'a death It waa the only aha went Into moments of dreamtunity of agreeing or disa,7reetatg place she wanted to go. no explanation for her with him. giving ing, She knew what he felt for her, but perhaps unconscious of The rural newspapers those he never made her uncomfortably abstraction, It Joe was only one detail In the the smaller cities and town conscious of It They were merely vague, thrilling background of the doing that and will continue the best of companions these days. doing that glowed and shone like it up to the time of the election, Joe always had another house gueet thoughts hidden treasure In her soul. will exert a greater influence or two; a fellow scientist, specHow would Larry return to her? They the on tacled and garrulous; a musical Where would she largest class of intelligent first see him, the coutde who kept the old piano go- tall with the little stoop to voters than any other one media in figure ing; a pair of wandering boya who the squared shoulders, the brown America. were working their way around the d The people of America are the nose and face with its world during the holidays. glasaea over keen gray eyes Would To entertain all of these Tony be telephone very casually: "Tony? was at her happiest and brightest This Is Larry. I got la this mornTHE She and Joe planned meals, fussed ing. Will you come to lunch with In the kitchen, compounded mo at Jules'?" together LAKE-TOOELSALT pot roasts and salads. Her beauty Or would he be standing by her was In Its glory; she waa twenty-sevedesk in the city office some afternow ; a newspaper woman noon? "Come and bare dinner with 1 some yours standing; confident me, Tony. Ive got to see Arnoidson and superb In her role of friend and Leaves Salt Lake now; I'll be upstairs until tlx. Ill Leaves Magna companion to an Interesting man for Salt Lake For Magna get you then." In her heart she felt that the 9.40 a. m. . 7.00 a. m. And then after that, what? But last touch of romance was added to 1:40 p. m. 11.00 a. m. breath would fall her as she Tonyi the situiulon aftet Ruth's death. 6.40 p. m 4.00 p. m. thought of the details; the happy Somewhere in the world was the 7:40 p. m. . details that Included wedcrowding 5 00 p. m. brilliant .man this brilliant and love- - ding plana and that SALT LAKE DEPOT Included new frock and the order77 South on West ing of the new cards of Mra LawTemple MAGNA DEPOT rence Hlllyard Bellamy, that Included trips in Larrys car the hisRasmussen Garage toric car of their two roadside accidents trips to the beach for lunch, and down to Monterey to see Bendy, and over to Carmel to cook dinner for Joa . He wouldn't maka much fust about It all ; Larry never did. There would be no open exultation, no compliments or pretestatlonn But she would have a sens of hla complete possession, bis quiet domination of her and everything that touched her. Just the way watched one Just the half smile In hla quizzical eyes was enough to give any woman a feeling of being completely, adequately adored. "Hare you heard anything from Joe asked one Sunday, Larry when he and 'she happened to be alone, and even the young birches and poplars, and lashing against a lathing tea. Everything out of doors waa apfRshlng aud dripping, and smoking with blown mist. Joe had called for Tony at eleven, and 100 torn her away from a happy bathing scent la Brenda's nursery. He PROOF bad explalaed that friends were Hs and She Had Built Up the Fire. coming down from town, and that WHISKEY he must have a special lunch. He was coming Theta were Important persona ; ly woman loved. PINTS for her ; she would presently have Professor Cede No.SU Unger waa as Tony exher marvelous hour. Under the plained It to Brenda "tho most FIFTHS surface of the spring Sundays when dlstlngnUhed something of ome-thln-g CmK No. 14 she and Joe and sometimes Brenda at Johns Hopkins," and Tony and Aivln and the boys, and some- must come over to make the salad times Cliff and Mary Rose were and amuse the company on this moving through the familiar hours, rainy day. the thrilling consciousness that The babies being comfortably Larry was somewhere in the world, asleep by this time, aod Brenda alive, thinking of her, flowed like a not too protestant, Tony bad bunshining current, sounded like a vi- dled herself np for the e CHANGE TO brant organ tone. drive, and bad thrown beraelf It had become almost routine for upon arriving. Into her to go to Brenda on Saturday. wholeheartedly, for Joe's guests. He preparations Sometimes Aunt Meg went too, for and aha had MINT built np the fire, had Brenda was In more spacious quarand straightened, had fried swept ters. Sometimes Aunt Meg stayed the fat little chicken and rubbed Bruce or went to Aunt Sally; in the salad bowl of gay garlic Knumtb Strmtkt often one of the newspaper men Russian wood. And then rUAtf was going down that way, and Tony painted the telephone bad brought tho exhad a lift And pected message: tbs Unger party She would arrive in her city would not come down la thla pourthe clothes at about four, get Into coming rain, but if it cleared they re nan- -c a, tie fortable cottons, alt with Brenda in would srriv after Immediately no. m mn-- M nmif c4 Ho. at the aunny back yard, wlthAathony lunch. . CO- - loc DISTlllERIES GLENMORB s, tottering about on the (TO BE Owensboro But leavened," far-awa- y Mr. Thomas R. Jones of Rock Springs. Wyoming and Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Jones of Salt Lake City and children were guests during the week of their mother. Mrs. Margaret Jones of First West street. Mrs. Jones accompanied her son and family, Mr. Sam Will- er luncheon Monday afternoon. Bridge was played by the following ladies: Mrs. Edna Monger, Mra. Pearl Wallace, Mrs. E. E. McCarty and Mrs Long. Mrs. Wallace won the prise. Miss Joyce Mayberry has gone on an extended visit to Idaho Falls Idaho with Mrs. Glen 6taker. high-bridge- E' STAGE JstNiVlUc COH YOU Has Iverufthiwgrl - . home-findin- isstr TOCS LOWEST PRICED 16 r MONTHS OLD base your judgment on Whether ofyouOldsmobile in action, or on Come in, or telephone us, nnd we will gladly place a car at your disposal for a thrilling trial drive over any route you choose. 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