Show THE OGDEN STAN D ARD-E- THURSDAY EVENING MAY 3 1934 4pron Used iFp Indicate Todayl and Tomorrow Tests re-re- ad ? all-arou- nd 3 ii i ( wn C s I i: ja-- ! rty-five Jk Priest Applauded As He which they were once identified Asks More Equitable There is a meeting of minds now Distribution because all these men have had the honesty to study the facts and the courage to modify their opinions Let the outcome stand on the record as an example of intellectual Integrity in a democracy It does not stand alone During the last few months there has been taking place a big discussion of the various policies adopted last spring and summer These policies were adopted quickly under the pressure of panic and without the1 usual safeguards of debate It was necessary to act quickly and decisively even at the risk of making mistakes The good which was accomplished has thus far outweighed the harm The panic was quelled Some recovery followed Yet there were 'mistakes which if persisted in are bound to obstruct recovery and endanger it In the last few months the country has acquired sufficient poise to examine these matters and to form opinions about them The opinions which are forming are remarkable in that they involve neither a wholesale condemnation nor a blanket approval of the whole program of the new deal but: discrimination and a desire to amend and perfect it ' " LOS ANGELES May Catholics from eleven western states returned to their discussions of industrial problems here today the final meetings of Catholic Action week being set aside for that and social service work Hundreds of delegates applauded lustily yesterday as the Rev John R Mulroy director of Catholic charities of Denver pleaded at the Industrial conference for "equitable distribution of worldly goods" He pointed to the "immense number of propertyless wage earners on the one hand" and the "superabundant riches of the fortunate few on the other" as an "unanswerable argument" that 'earthly goods are far from rightly distributed "An ample sufficiency must be supplied the working man" he contended 3-(- - ! This debate has produced some bad temper some wilds charges' some personal abuse But on the whole the critics have not been destructive and the supporters have not been dogmatic The critics of NRA of the securities act of the banking bill of the stock exchange bill have not only been listened to but have produced an effect Not only has Mr Roosevelt assumed none of the airs of a dictator but he has even refrained from any attempt to stand pat on his measures and to make an emotional issue of them He might easily with his enormous powers of popular appeal have done that He has chosen instead to hear the criticism to profit by it and to modify his policies when it seemed wise to do so That does not mean that any one is likely to be completely satisfied That is impossible in a country where Interests are diverse and opinion is free But it does mean that we have passed safely through the emergency of the panic and that American institutions are working as they were de signed to work under the guidance of public opinion enlightened by debate The two basic conditions of popular government are being respected The one is that opposition shall not be The other is that the administration in power shall not be r pig-head- ed Last March we needed above all other things decisive leadership and a willingness to follow it That is the only way in which great crises can be surmounted" Today we need temperate debate which will clarify policies make known their effects disclose their errors and propose modifications We are getting that kind of debate and those who are contributing to it Mr Roosevelt himself Mr Hull Mr Wallace Mr Stimson Mr Mills are acting in the best tradition of public life which as Burke said is that "magnanimity in politics is not seldom the truest wisdom and a great empire end little minds go ill together" Copyright 1934 N Y Tribune Inc Editor To the In the Best Tradition Range Skill SUMMER fetters SPLIT FAVORED Byj WALTER LIPPMANN Mr SUmson's indorsement of the tariff bill has provoked Senator Hastings to say that "like most good Americans who have occupied Held In the position of Secretary of State" Unusual he "has gotten a foreign viewpoint Home Economics instead of one that 14 truly Am- 'Classes i erican" The senator! seems to have overlooked the fact that it is not only Mr Hoover's secretary of OGDEN HIGO SCHOOL NOTES Alary Paquette— Editor state who holds these Views If he Jack Bennett— Associate Editor will the address delivered at Topeka on JanuarjT 30 by Mr In our home economics classes Hoover's secretary of tjhe treasury we have learned a great deal in he will find there the same views j preparing of breakfasts idinners and Mr Mills said: A practically completely self- luncheons One lesson that helped contained and controlled na- - ' Us out a great deal in ouij home cooktional economy can doubtless be ing was the making of bread Each attained but only at a frightful girl made a loaf of bread at home social cost and by jthe forced and brought it to school where it migration of millionsr of people was graded on appearance taste from their homes and an and color lowering of ' thfe standard Miss Jones has taken up a new j of living Twice each idea of giving tests 1 prefer to turn my attention week five girls are given one thing to the possibilities among others the to i cook They are Judged by of recovering lost markets how of their they apron appearance Granted that the difficulties are go about their work and how the enormous and that much time This donei way apron looks when and patience will b3 required of giving tests makes the subject I 'this is even more tifue of the e C 4'ot interesting self -- containment program We home about the said much is will have to abandon the present economics classes bul if one were policy of isolation apd intense to visit us I'm sure they would nationalism and to some extent think the girls were doing some modify recent tariff! practices good work— Le Ida Roberts This may sound strarige coming from an orthodox Republican SONG world but I have never understood that all this in There's nothing ' a sound system of protection So sweet as a beautiful song means the erection of impassible A carol to cheer weary hearts tariff barriers the destruction When everything seems to go of our commerce with the rest 'wrongi of the world and the sacrifice Sweet melodies are the might of the efficient farmer to save Which can keep life moving the inefficient manufacturer! along— And God seems to speak to us This is the identical When we hear a beautiful song taken by Mr Stimson! Itposition is the —Elizabeth: Parkinson position taken by Mr Wallace by Mr Hull and by Mrj Roosevelt HAS THE FLAVOR LASTED? It may seem incredible! to irreconThe manufacturer of a well-knocilable partisans but it is neverchewing gum advertises his theless true: on the fundamental product by making the statement question of national policy as to that "the flavor lasts" whether we are to cdntract our The school year is rapidly draw- - economic and be forced to a conclusion During this into a existence of regime compulsory reviool term a great lmany new to or striction it by deexpand) friends have been made perhaps the two lots of old friends have drifted out veloping foreign trade to! men best qualified speak for of our friendship We have met and the Republican party are in associated with new students and with the leaders of aggreement to new teachers We have begun Democratic the party There could new work our in school take up more be not a inspiriting example fields fields that we had never of the triumph of disinterested before known art R C T C advanced mathematics typing "and opinion over partisan dogma many more subjects In other words we have come to know high school It is not only the Republican and all it has to offer Naturally leaders who have moved away as is the case of the young man from their previous position When with the new car we were anxious Mr Hull was in the opposition he Jto investigate we were interested opposed a grant of powers to the in our new surroundings To most president which dldct go so far of us life Just took on a new meanas the bill he now sponsors Mr Roosevelt passed through a phase ing we had a fresh stick of chewin our mouths! of intense economic nationalism ' ing gum Now the year is almost spent Has last summer during thef early days the flavor lasted? Do we appreciate of the NRA So it is not only Mr friends as we did Stimson and Mr Millss who have our newly-mad- e fit the first of the year J Are we as with departed from the policy ' ihiMrtii tjv trot to wftrk at our I ' w subjects'? If we cannot answer yes to these questions If we can't on the calender Then away we will say that we are still interested then flap our wings to bluejr skies and Hhe flavor has not lasted and the greener pastures or stky homesunto sunny days of basking in the "gum did- not have the flavor we Oh-h-h we sigh with irjsuppressible a make To it had long thought of birds singing n the open story short have we enjoyed high envy bees air drowsily humming on the Junschool? We hope that all the aromatic us blooming flowers or other when will with class lor agree i we say that we know the flavor has living creatures really lfving outside lasted The high school has fulfill of a school's interior We long with Intensity to again ed its promises! —Blaine Larsen feel the warmth of a hbt fiery sun SYMPATHY beat down on our shoulders in hikvv c vix ing over vegetated hills) to feel cx1 lug aiuuaiw buiu iavuiijr waters lap again-- t out bodies to O H S extend our sincere thy to Arleen Ballinger and family exultantly ride through jinvigorating over the sudden passing of their breezes brushing against our cheeks In summer i that is life father Then next fall we corhe prepared SPRING to exert every energy for school life As the warm sun rises each flow after satisfying to completion that to greet exuberant summer longing —Emily er raises its droopy he him South wind gently breezes Merrill along and the tiny blossoms nod their heads in unison The birds UNIVERSITY TESTS ing merrily as they gather tiny bits On Saturday May 12 it eight help toward the building of their o'clock at Hall ( --tjsts Almost everywhere we look University of UtahKingsbury placeEnglish we can see children riding bicycles ment and psychology tfests will be roller skating playing ball or play- given to all : students jwho expect ing -- some sort of game jf The stores to enter the University of Utah are literally packed with people this fall This information came to buying their1 spring apparel New the high school office! from the shoes purses president of the university hats gloves suits belts jackets light airy dresses etc can be seen everywhere Oh what a joyous time is spring! m 170PLDLY GOODS AMINER X Editor Standard-Examine- r: had a letter in a recent paper by A W Agee on the subject of transients It was interesting not because it taught us anything but because it was In direct line with the way we have all been taught to think New thoughts are always opposed by the old Most of us never think at all In fact our inherited ability and our childhood training if any does most of our thinking for us We seldom ever add a new idea Here is where the transient or bum comes in This type of human is born and bred When he once gets set that way he is likely to stay If he or she happens to be of a well f to-d- o family that is willing to keep him the taxpayer is absolved When the family fails society has to do it Understand this party won't work Society says he has a right to live Now then we can do as we have tried to do and as Mr Agee seems to insist Pass laws to make him work This would be fine if we could just find a way to pass unbreakable laws Say like the law Trouble with all humof gravity an-made laws is that they are just rules Easy to break Doesn't eveni require much brains usually You see Mr Agee that transient Just goes ahead and breaks those rules Steals or robs Gets caught Goes to jail I believe it's the taxCourt payer that pays the bill costs Lawyer fees Jail board I have a hunch that it is a demonstrated fact that a transient hotel withi no thought of a job for the transient bum is the cheaper way out for the taxpayer Unless we could devise a right cheap way to bury him You won't change his mind withi a breakable human law any more than I will change Mr Agee's mind by writing this answer to his You - f letter We don't happen to need the unwilling and forced labor of those DOG GRIEVES OVER PAW bums right now There isn't enough TAZEWELL Va— (UP)— G W to go around as it is Their work Boyd had a large bulldog of friendly never did do us much good Truly disposition which is grieving be- useful work is always willingly and cause its front leg was cut off by gladly done Forced work is of — a car It was the paw with which he always shook hands with strangers Now when the dog meets friends he sits down and looks solemnly at the place where there once was a friendly paw douhtful value Our government is trying a scheme now calculated to make it unnecessary for transients and bums to have to steal and beg to livet Understand they won't work lng to the northeast swell' lifting CAT KIDNAPED i the fish to the surface at the top of the swell "Inspection revealed that it was not a whale but a rare specimen of BY whale shark 45 feet In length and SUSPECT about six feet in diameter Shortly after eight p m it still appeared May 3--1 (AP)— Mrs £s-te- lle Stem of Liner Curved As to be alive We did not? put astern DENVER Leo says her cat has been kid hoping it would remain there until It Cuts Mammal In she wants soraethins and naped could be studied daylight when it done about it more closely Two Parts "It remained across the bow all ' 'T know the woman who took my NEW YORK May 3— (UP)— A night About four a m it cut- in cat and I want her charged withi fell away" grand larceny" Mrs Leo told Hunew epic of the sea in which a vic two and — —— L Shattuck assistant district bert f4 ious whale shark attacked ' attorney an ocean vessel and impaled itself a "That's pretty grave charge Holding on her bow was told today by the said Shattuck "Yes and that's a pretty import crew of the Grace liner Santa Lu ant cat" Mrs Leo retorted "because) cia it's my cat" The stem of the liner which ar PHILADELPHIA May 3— (UP)— Shattuck promised to try to get in rived from Central American ports was curved slightly as evidence of Federal agents today were reported touch with the accused "catnaper the unusual battle that occurred holding four prisoners and soluApril 25 in the Gulf of Darien Prof eel Your do The shark according to A EL tions to three murders two kidnap-lng- s a $60000 bank robbery several Richards a veteran whaler was im From Finn! Lfco mail robberies and 12 hijackings paled about 10 feet from its head because a slain gunman's moll lived Don't let your lovely roses ba Unable to fre itself it lashed the lice when it is so easy— by — water with terrific force and cast to squeal on his enemies who had spoiled to protect them all sea and cheap sentenced to her death a phosphorescent glow as it was SOn Although keeping secret the Inpushed ahead of the vessel Simply sprinkle the bushes with formation she gave them agents Buhach and you can know your Reporting the incident Richards said Mary Elizabeth Fontaine 29 roses will be safe Money back If you continued: "Its about is the best ten feet on the starboard and its recoverine from a bullet wound re don't agree that Bu-hatecton against insect pests you tail about 35 feet along the port vealed details of a list of Maryland E ro side' The ship was rising and f Ji Virginia and District of Columbia ave ever tried crimes They said four suspects IN HANDY SIFTER GAMS were held at Richmond Va AT D£U3iG£X)CRY4 SEED STORES' lt is impossible to devise any The girl companion of "Bl 25 go law or rule that will make George Phillips " slain in Anril bv them I honestly believe that it will Washington police was found shot be cheaper to take care of them in a Philadelphia rooming house by the transient hotel plan than to She said Phllins' eanester foes use the police sheriff court lawyer afraid she would talk kidnaped her and jail system we have heretofore then decided to kill her followed This last system makes it necessary for these bums to steal rob and beg This also costs the taxpayer I say this new scheme is worth trying If it works our courts will be relieved of petty stuff and can concentrate on criminals' Then we agitators might spend our time trying to ferret out and make unpopand what does It mean to you? ular the well-to-transient and n THIS: if you feel listless bum so they won't find it so easy dull with a weak to marry and reproduce themselves JUST feeJing perhaps nervous 'and worn out These lazy bums are found everywhy not where and they are the result of make an effort to "snap out" of this condition? both heredity --and environment Try toning up your appetite increasing your the best way to be happy Thank you You need a tonic— not just a tonic CHARLES HARTLEY : but a tonic that will tone up your blood SJSS is apeclally designed to do this for you Unless your case is exceptional you should improve as your in oxygen-carryin- g increases UPaereper it occurs on the bodq— hota-evAt all drug stores in two convenient sizes The tender or sensitive the parts—quick larger size is more economical O The SSS Co iq ana sajeiij reuepea enj CI SHIP ATTACKED IK VOrmCHARGES SHARK NAMES - 45-fo- ot Four Agents For Murders Thefts head-extende- d ch j 7515 so-call- ed n INSECT POVDCR time is hero do run-dow- let-do- red-blood-c- so-cal- led ixcHinq sicm hemo-glo-b- er MEM Dei — me Spg-8E-fe mm bull-head- ed "v v v UASIJ OUT 15 MILES W Si EUDHEV HIDES Win Back Pep Vigor Medical authorities mgrec nTB mntaiii IE MITPa f 7 Vitality kid- that your l 4 1 filters which help to purify the blood and Keep you neu mj inej BDOUia pour out thru the bladder S pint of fluid a day which contains 4 pounds of waste matter tIf you have trouble with too frequent uiauuer punsn wiia seamy amount caun- urn Dunuii ana aiscomiort tne 15 "if kldnv tiitua vnoA waahtno on TV - j ger siarnal may be the besinninff of nagging uacMcas ie pun jos 01 pep ana vitality up nights lumbago swollen feet eetting ana nn w! iiwiftA n1ta mA If kidneys don't empty S pints every day i na vi iwunai 01 waste matter up tnese poisons causing fuur booj win serious trouble It may knock you out and vay you up for many months Don't wait sk your druggist for DOAN'S PILLS been used successfully by mlllloas of kidney sufferers for over 40 years They give quick wasn out the 15 nejP iVl?naof W1i MILES kidney tubes But don't fair kIuiimi wtfV or "kidney cures" that claim to ix im- i ruu minutes i our common sense will tell you that this is Treatments of this nature nu impossible aHmi nd irritate delicate inidt tiup DOAN'S PILLS tbe old reliable relief at contain no "dope" or It your druggist Q 1934 Co mi V V ie : if in ""'n it ed habit-formi- Foster-Milbu- ng rn LONGING Just four more weeks we count Fainted : Had to be t Carried Home from Work r j ' FJG3G ttZHi '" f " ©273 tiEdSB' ei ce$w7C-r- i progsroint - j v 'j:v (SL3MIE m mm mill— ! ire aiwavs in fm ° Vvays land to w ur throat" - 5 ' : ' -- and (SLLIEMBJ lr:sl7ol7or!t Ruth Hirsch is a typist in a rail-- " office in Dayton Ohio "Several times I fainted" she writes "and had to be carried home Since I took your medicine I can work right through each month I feel well and strong Women are learning by welcome experience tnac wese time cnocoute coated tablets keep them fA" the job every day Try them Probably you can roa-- i xtCZI czu?eZy XTiin Tate car xrerd for It —you will har these efiaracters lacTesalns nlitly irlth iatert and v yw— LLYDIA lr v E PINKHAM"S TABLETS c mmBMc3 r GAFSTY CAiOn CO yen KDYL end SzznCny at 8:15 pm IL B T 7 - ' round so firm so fully packed— no loose ends thafs why you'll find Luckies do not dry out so iljl Zero's E3o!p for i : S V x v X - A " It's: toasted"'" are made They're so round and firm to free from loose ends That's why Luckies "keep in condition"— that's why you'll find that Luckies do not dry out— cn important point to every smoker Luckies are kind to your throat always— in We like to tell about the finer tobaccos in Luckies — the choicest Turkish and domestic and only the mild clean center leaves—they taste better— then "It's toasted"— for throat protection But we're just as proud of the way Luckies all-ways- !— V Luckies are alUways kind to your throat - I 4 Only the Center Leaves— these are the Mildest Leaves (Z&p rp s cassis- ' Purse Size— 50£— All Druggists 1 |