OCR Text |
Show PAGE TEN PRO V 0 (UTAH) E VENING H.E-R A LD, W E N E,S D AY, JUNE 2 6,. I 9& 5u 5 f "Proelaim Libert 7 threaKk all tfc !!" Liberty Hell The Herald Every Af teraooa except Satardaj Saatar MaratM- Published by th Herali Corporation, 60 South Firat Went street, Provo, Utah. Entered aa second-cl&as matter at the pottofflce in Provo, Utah, under the act of March 8, 1879. Oilman. Nlcoll & Ruthman, National Advertising representatives. New York, San Francisco, Detroit, Boston, Lou Angeles. Seattle. Chioago. Member United Press, N.E.A. Service. Western Features and the 8crippa League of Newspapers. Subscription terms by carrier in Utah county 50 cents the month, $2.75 for six months, In advance; 15.00 the year, in advance; by mail in Utah county, in advance, 14.50; outside Utah county. 16.00. "Those who are governed least are governed best." "The power to tax Is the power to destroy." Thomas Jefferson. Sharing the National Wealth Redistribution of wealth now seems to be the pet panacea pana-cea for all our econimic ills. Even the leaders of the national nation-al administration seem to have heeded the demands of the mistaken economists who think that everything can be made perfect by a simple process that tends toward equalization. Yet, if all the wealth in the nation were divided up today, and if pteh of u-s had our share, we would all be poor. The great majority of us would be poorer than before the distribution. dis-tribution. Huey Long proposes to place limits on wealth, to confiscate con-fiscate by taxation and distribute by decree. The administration adminis-tration demands higher taxes on profits of corporations, higher levies on large incomes, nearly confiscatory taxes on large inheritances and gifts the idea being not only to distribute dis-tribute some of the concentrated wealth but to raise cash with which to pay the increasing government bill. Neither Huey's plan, nor the administration's proposals will distribute wealth. Higher taxes will simply increase the cost of living. Taxes are passed along to the ultimate consumer con-sumer who pays ALL of the taxes. Large concentrations of wealth do NOT pay, they simply collect. Inheritance taxes have proven easy hurdles for lawyers to leap. Big estates will not be broken up by taxation. ' ' a 7 It is admitted, of course, that the government must find more cash, must soak us with much higher taxes, if it keeps on spending at its present rate. If the spending goes on too long, we won't be able to pay. There won't be enough even if the government takes it all. We are eating up our capital as a nation destroying wealth more rapidly than we are producing it. Somewhere along the line there has got to be a substitute for open-handed spending. Will the administration find it? We said above that if all the nation's wealth were divided di-vided up, most of us would be poorer than we are today. That is a fact. It is true that most of the wealth is in the hands of a few men, but it cannot be distributed. Wealth is not money, it is lands and buildings, machines and works of art, in scenery and livestock. Divide it arbitararilv. and you.destroy most of it, or make it unable to serve us. Thus, j taxation that cripples industry also cripples the workers, j The industrial machine is useful only when operating; it is ; valueless when torn apart. j ;c ! A fairer distribution aming the people of the wealth which the people produce is our great American problem. '. The mere distribution of money now existing is un-import-ant and not even desirable. Something for nothing is al-' ways an economic crime. ' This nation is poor in produced wealth. Continue the Hilly federal alphabetic programs and it will be stlil poorer. &. year from now. We are rich only in possibilities and op-; portunities in unproduced wealth. j e must have more lood, more shoes, more clothing more automobiles, more homes, more of everything our people peo-ple want. More, not less, should be our national watchword should be the goal of our national leadei How to do all this', the practice of his skill. Encourage him to go forward; re-; ward him for progress. Give the sluggard less and the pro- j , ducer more: provide opportunity for ALL to work and give j each an equitable share of the total. Here is the challenge to American leadership. OUT OUR WAY BY WILLIAMS OVJ- o-o-oo I Butter smeared ALL OVER MV NEIAJ DRESS GOODS WMV CANJ'T ME LUMCM OUT IfsJ THE klTTHEki WHM I'M USIWG THE TABLE TO CUT OUT A' DKESS? X WAS MERE FIRST. V7 V WHAT? VAvOPIhJQ OVER. A LITTLE THIMQ LIKE BUTTER nu A DRESS UJAJT TILU you mave a pamfly vou'll piwd crank case oil, i si , you r. tea kettle:, half a Bicycle jw tk eath tub, carburetors onj th' table CLOTH, cup grsase: ow th' TEA TOVUELS BUTTER POOP'' 1 I k TABLE TO CUT OUT A III BY 1 I III Mil it rim J 1936 BY NEA SERVICE IMC. U0MY MOTHERS GET (3 RAY T. M. BEG. U. 8. PAT. OFF. J - Howdy, folks! One of the minor mysteries of life is why the gink with the finest fishing fish-ing tackle only catches little fellows. H The only full meals at some summer resorts are those enjoyed by the mosquitoes. ORCHESTRA LEADERS OF AMERICA Washington Merry Go Round (Continued from Pge One) Egbert Mushroom, Mush-room, the first man in America to use an outboard out-board motor in a ja z z orchestra. "The outboard motor, says Egbert, Eg-bert, "s o u n d.. just as musical as a saxophone, and is far more deafening." --Photo by Howard Kearns. j The honeymoon is over when the bride says, "Why don't you j ever bring me candy in a box i any more ? " I I "Why the tears, honey?" ! "They aren't tears! They're First, safeguard the individual in . llfiuid cuss words." T f T FITTING THE PI'MSHMENT TO THE CRIME What to do with thi' thief who steals your 1 927 fliwer: Make God of Love HORIZONTAL 1 The naked winged god of love. I Honey gatherer. gath-erer. 8 He was the son of the goddess . v 13 Dry 14 Stream. 16 Had on. 17 Story. 18 Imbecile. 19 Domestic slave. 10 Slightest t2Gad? of the field 15 Sloths. 17 Iniquity E8 Self-willed. 11 Greater quantity 14 Dubbed 15 Expert 17 Energy 19 Above 11 To depart 12 Street 1.6 Gem weights Answer to 1'revions Puzzle A'lTaTIl iQ wVTt LJoTn ELZJAIP E. DiRjl IV R O M E. O 1 TlllIrT UOrTT QTyiElOnpIl 'PLJE'WPr B'E A R nS!l T SDEIY ElD &f LliJJAjklELPWRu' o a j priiA DmlI I ISDEIRIA !p UCTT R.U C EMS L ATf Slo t- E. LJfL A aiE" DLJL A TH imTi n ieTJp TeTn ljm aTt i 21 .v..nkt;y. l!'! t'iiijuiu tinn tale is ii I t Ti; . il - t I I I D VI IIS H 20 Dross faa- him ke p the d;. rn thing;!- There is one thing that can be constitutional, said in favor of railroad time- ... tables tven if you are looking at the wrong one, it probably doesn't :.i tier. ABIGAIL .AI'FjI.KSAKE SE.: X 4c profit" on management service charges Such blanket delegation of power, administration experts assert, as-sert, is patently .unconstitutional. And they cite recent supreme court rulings in tne "hot oil" and "sick chicken" cases as irrefutable irrefuta-ble evidence of their contention. In both decisions, the court threw out the law chiefly because congress con-gress had delegated undue power to administrative agencies. "DEATH CLAUSE" DEMISE I . Huddleston and Pettengill pooled pool-ed forces in scuttling the "death warrant" section. Their substitute strikes out this provision azid replaces it with another an-other blanket-authority device. TTnder their wording, the Securities Securi-ties and Exchange Commission would be empowered to decide which holding companies should be abolished, and which should not. Against this proposal administration adminis-tration leaders raise not only the issue of constitutionality but that of practicability. Even if constitutional consti-tutional which is most unlikely it would be physically impossible for the SEC to pass judgment on the hundreds of giant holding cimpany combines throughout the country. Notwithstanding these arguments. argu-ments. Huddleston and Pettengill, seconded by Xew Deal Republicans Republi-cans Mapes and Wolverton, put these utility - approved amendments amend-ments through the interstate commerce com-merce commission and pushed the president's bill before the full house in a form that administra- tionites regard as obviously un- a junior at Harvard, is the more popular of the two. A weekly news magazine recently estimated his invitations at 200 a week, but a more accurate figure is 100 during dur-ing the spring and summer season. sea-son. During tne college year he gets less. Franklin has become socially hard-boiled, turns down most invitations. in-vitations. John, youngest Roosevelt boy, will be a Harvard sophomore next year. He attends more social functions than Franklin, chiefly because he has not yet learned the art of refusing. Franklin is the largest member of the family, has a splendid physique. Both boys have excellent minds, are mentally lazy, don't begin to crack a book until shortly before exams, but come through with flying colors. MERRY-GO-ROUND YOUNGEST ROOSEVELTS :; . Don't begin drawing your money out of the bank just because be-cause the deposit insurance guarantee guar-antee may lapse June 30. Congress, Con-gress, no matter how dilatory, will step in first. The present plan is to continue the maximum of guaranteed guar-anteed deposits at $5,000. Though this requires passage of the central cen-tral bank act, now delayed, congress con-gress will rush through a special resolution before June 30. Later the permanent act will be passed. . . . Truce between Bolivia and Paraguay has brought a social truce between their diplomatic representatives in Washington. When Bolivian Secretary Lozada wanted to send some money to an old servant captured by Paraguay. Para-guay. Minister Bordenave of that country offered to remit. . . . The president chose a good time to escape Washington for the beat races. In front of the White House, the noise of demolishing grandstands for the Shriners' parade continues until late evening. eve-ning. . . . Exports of cotton" from the United States keep shrinking. During the first ten l 55 NiA StWOLiMa. CHAPTER XXXIII 1UORMAN HAPP whirled lmpa- tiently and exclaimed, "What's the matter?" Milllcent dragged him away from the door, towatd a turn in the corridor. "Look!" she said. Getting out of t levator!" Happ raised hhv eyes and saw Robert Calse swinging down the hallway, his figure silhouetted against the, light which flashed brilliantly over the elevator door. Milllcent knew that at any moment mo-ment Calse would raise his eyes and that he was bound to discover them. The corridor was not brightly Illuminated, save for the place above the elevator shaft. Anyone entering from the bright daylight would, of necessity, require re-quire a few moments to adjust his eyes to the dim illumination ot tUe corridor. This was all that had kept them from being discovered. There was a bend in the corridor cor-ridor some 20 or 30 feet beyond where they were' standing but there jwas no time for them to reach ,lt. Milllcent grasped Norman's Nor-man's arm and pulled him into a doorway a questionable place of concealment, but infinitely better than standing in plain sight. "Keep quiet," she whispered. "But he's going to walk right past us," Norman Happ objected. "No, no! He's going to Apartment Apart-ment 309." The pair stood flattened against the doorway, hardly daring to breathe. But Caise was so preoccupied preoc-cupied that he hardly glanced down the corridor. He paused before be-fore the door of Apartment 309. hesitated a moment, then raised his hand and knocked on the panels. Millicent noticed the manner man-ner in which he knocked a peculiar pe-culiar rhythm, two knocks, a pause, two more knocks and then a single knock. rpHERE was no answer and Caise had apparently expected none. It was as though the knocks had been some signal that had been agreed upon. He took a key from his pocket, fitted it in the lock and went in. Norman Happ said grimly, "That Bettles it. Bob is mixed up in this thing and I'm going to pull him out of there by the collar col-lar and drag him down to the police station. . . ." "No. no!" Millicent said. "We've got to get evidence. It'a going to take something that we can use to convince the police. He'd say he had found the key or that someone had loaned him a key, or something of that sort. WeTe got to Und out Just why he -went td ibat apartment." She could feel the muscle of Norman Happ's arm quivering through his coat sleeve. He was like a 'hound held in leash. "Well, "what are we going to do?" Happ asked. "We can't stand here waiting for him to come out." "Hurry," she told him. "We'll run own to the bend in the corridor cor-ridor and wait there. We can watch and see when he comes out." She tugged at his coat sleeve and after a moment's hesitation he accompanied her. They gained the bend in the corridor, turned and stared back at the door of the apartment in which the mysterious Phylli? Faulconer was registered. It seemed to Millicent as though it had been almost 10 minutes, although she realized the interval must have been shorter, when the door opened and Bob Calse stepped Into the corridor. He jerked the door shut with that sullen violence which characterized charac-terized him when he was in a temper, and strode toward the elevator. "He's mad as the devil about something," Norman Happ said. "I know him well enough to know when he gets one of those fits of black rage." "JMTILLJCENT shuddered and said, "Surely you don't suspect that . . ." "Don't ever fool yourself," he told her grimly. "I'd suspect Bob Caise of anything. Do you know what I believe? I believe there's a chance my father is being held prisoner right in that room." "Why, Norman Happ!" she said. "Do you mean to tell me Bob would do anything like that!" "When my father dies," Norman Nor-man said, "Bob expects to come into a lot of money." "Would your father leave If to him?" "No. but Cynthia would inherit it, and Bob figures on getting his share. He's a crooked schemer and he's smart as the very devil." Bob Caise jerked back the elevator ele-vator door, entered the cage and a moment later the door slid smoothly closed. Norman Happ said to Millicent. "I'm going to find out what's in that apartment." "And then what?" "That," he told her, "depend on what we find." He led the way down the corridor, cor-ridor, came to a halt before the door of Apartment 309. He took the keys from his pocket, tried one in the lock, gave an exclamation exclama-tion of disappo intra eat. inserted another and said in a half whisper, whis-per, "This is going to do it." Millicent heard the bolt click back, and Norman Happ pushed his way into the room, saying. "Let me look around before you come in. It may be dangerous." She had no intention of allowing allow-ing him to face any danger whicn that room might hold. She was, moreover, impelled by curiosity to find out just what was in this mysterious apartment. So strong was this curiosity that it wasn"t until after she had entered the room and heard the door slam shut behind her that she realized she and Norman Happ had feloniously felon-iously broken into an apartment rented by a woman whom neither of them knew. "Pleaee be careful, Norman," she cautioned. He turned to flash her a reassuring re-assuring smile. "Don't worry. Milllcent, Mil-llcent, they won't catch us. If anyone comes in I'm going tq start a fight. You make an escape while the fighfB golngon." 'Please don't!" MTl 1 I c e n t pleaded. "Please take care of 'yourself. Norman." j "Forget it." he told her. "No one's come in yet and we can look the place over and get out before anyone does." He swept his arm about in an Inclusive gesture. "Lookaround," he said, "and see what you can find. We want something that will give us a clew to the identity of the woman who has this apart-men, apart-men, and perhaps we can find some damaging evidence that will incriminate Bob Caise." TTE crossed to the window and pulled up the shade, lettinK additional light flood the room. The apartment showed evidence of having been occupied recently. There were ash trays in which burnt matches and cigaret atubs were littered about. In the little kitchenet a bottle of Scotch was more than half emptied, two syphons of soda had bee drained, and a third was about a quarter full. An ice tray had been aken from the electric ice bo tnd. judging from the water in the bottom of the aluminum pan. some of the cubes had been allowed al-lowed to melt. Two highball glasses were on the sink, side by side. Norman Happ started m methodical survey of the ash trays, inspected the various brands of cigaretB which had been smoked, segregating those which had the stain of pink lipstick on them from those which had no such color. Millicent, giving the apartment a quick glance, determined that Phyllis Faulconer was rather a shiftless housekeeper. She flung open the door of the closet, then suddenly recoiled with an exclamation excla-mation of amazement. "Norman!" she cried. "Look here!" He reached her side in three strides, caught her by the shoulder shoul-der and said. "What is it?" Even in the excitment of the moment she recalled with a thrill of satisfaction that his first coi-cern coi-cern was for her. His eyes were not on the interior of the closet but upon her white, startled countenance. coun-tenance. "What is it?" he asked. "What startled you? (let back of me. Let me handle it." "No. no, silly." she told him. laughing. "There's nothing to fight. Just look there in the closet." She nodded toward the dark interior. For a moment be failed to observe ob-serve that which she indicated. Then, as his eyes accustomed themselves to the darkness, he gave a quick intake of his breath. "Good Lord!" he said. "So that's it, is it? That's what we've been chasing." (To Be Continued) ICTa P UL' IT TRIAGE. tener 27 Pace 2! Seed bag :: Wrath III Wool fiber knots. .",2 Last word of ET jnayei P iy I Wine cask :'.s Pei-ause. 5i To exchange 61 Assessment amount. 5?. Footway 5.r Pertaininp to air f.f. Pc-e of business 67 Region He fell in lovei y,,M t,,r w'tn cremation 69 He shot v:Tn (it)sorve at h.s vn-tims.14 Dajh f()()d VERTICAL allowance 1 Pussy lf Depended 2 Russian mountains ?. Heap 4 Thought Flour ho i Pad 7 Snaky tuii Pitcllel 1" Snout 40 Pocketbook. 41 Helmet-shaped Helmet-shaped part 42 1 nsjti res rev-'rence rev-'rence 4:: To diversify 4) Narrative p( em. 4" To devour 4 1. Auto 47 Armadillo 4V Root Stork 4'1 To simmer fd Tree fluid 12 To pull ( Kvris i for i boys gi:iEi BQ ey so zi g xj J Mh 1 !t JSr: L H 1 I n n rH l I Tlz k "Th' cup of hap-pijiess hap-pijiess usu ally springs a leak just Ix fore it begins to run over." When a man in the Balkans hears a noise in the night, he doesn't know whether it's burglars or- just another revolution. 2f.2f.2f.2f. Li'l Gee Gee is very sentimental She preserves all her old swimming swim-ming suits by pasting them in her crapbook. 2f.2f.2f.2f. ' Jl NE BKIDF JOAK Bride (consulting cook-book): , my cake is burning and I can't take it out for f i v 1 minutes min-utes yet! In some South American countries, coun-tries, it isn't the one who gets the oiost votes who's elected; it's the one who gets the fewest bullets. 2f.2f.2f.2f. Ring out. glad bells! months of the last exrort war Summer is not exactly a holiday foreign sales totaled 7,585,000 me iwo youngest Kooseveii bales. During: the same Deriod this year, they dropped to 4,410,-000 4,410,-000 bales. . . Meanwhile Canada is cutting in our foreign trade with South America. (Copyright 1935, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) ranklin and John. With the beginning of the graduation and house party season, their social so-cial invitations increase about 100 per cent. Franklin, who next year will be SIDE GLANCES - By George Clark Bright Moments In Great Lives Goethe, the great German writ- j er, was a prolific writer and his literary activity embraced a span of nearly 70 years. After his death, he furnished the theme for many a work of writers of biographies bio-graphies and controversial articles. arti-cles. Many of these articles were written even before his death. Aa could well be expected some of these writings wre anything but flattering. Schiller, a contemporary writer writ-er and almost equally well known to students of literature, became disguisted with the attacks upon Goethe, After reading one particular par-ticular article that he disapproved of, he said bitterly: "Well, it must be remembered that when kings build, the draymen dray-men have plenty to do." Utf m MM JT J- Mrs. Pardoe Opera Reader Mrs. Kathryn Pardoe, instructor instruc-tor in speech at the Brigham Young university, will read the opera "Martha" by Flotow, during dur-ing its presentation by studentr of the music department of the university, announced William F. Hanson, assistant professor of music, today. The opera is scheeduled to take place sometime some-time during the fifth week of the summer quarter. This plan of having a reader accompany the opera, which was inaugurated two years ago in the production "Tannhaeuser," augments aug-ments an opera very much from the standpoint of continuity, according ac-cording to Professor Hanson. A complete orchestration has been sent for, according to Professor Profes-sor Hanson. The orchestra will be under the direction of Professors LeRoy J. Robertson and Robert Sauer of the music department. Liquor Store To Change Schedule The state liquor store at Provo will open later in the morning and remain open one hour longer in the future, it was anonunced today to-day by John Manson, manager. The hours of the liquor store will henceforth be from 10 a. m. to 11 p. m. on week days, and from 10 a. m. until 12 midnight on Saturdays and the day before holidays. The store will be closed efa legal holidays, Sundays and election days. Our Glasses Relieve Eye Strain STOP HEADACHES Absolute Results Guaranteed Optometry is Your Safeguard! DR. O. H. HEINDSELMAN Optometrist - 120 West Center BOARD TO MEET The board of adjustment of Provo City will meet in the city and county building Tuesday, July 2 at 6 p. m. to hear the appeal of the Catholic church, Second North and Fifth West streets, for a variation var-iation of the city zoning ordinance to permit the erection of a fence six feet high to be constructed of concrete. The fence is to be placed back six feet from the sidewalk line on the north side and eight feet back from the sidewalk on the west. "Come on, Joe, I can't rest here, I always get inspired when I see a statue of a great man." UNION BUS DEPOT NEW LOCATION JULY 1, 1935 SALT LAKE AND UTAH R. R DEPOT 85 West Center St, Provo Home of Union Pacific Stages and Connecting Lines. Phone 310-W. Jess ScoviUe, AgL Have Your Mattress Work Done NOW! VACATION TIME A good time to check up on your Mattress needs. A Good New Mattress or your old one made new by the latest and most sanitary process used in our Modern Factory, is an excellent excel-lent investment in comfort and satisfaction. OUR GREATEST PLEASURES ARE OUR PLEASED PATRONS! SEND US YOUR MATTRESS TROUBLES WE ENJOY THEM UTAH CO. MATTRESS FACTORY PHONE 345 661 West Second North - Provo, Utah |