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Show . ie pS eet ee eS _UINTAH BASIN Wrapped in Cellophane —Briefly told by William Bruckart Washington.—Increasingly Right or since rope have told of activities of “right” wing Left Wing itical parties, and other divisions of of the po- “blocs” political be and called in connection with periodicals no longer enclose the words “right” or “left” in quotation marks. In other words, those two ers of the country share the burden. Mr. Roosevelt’s monetary plans, terms lar, are radical, and as have come meaning his projected to be understood conservative or radical thought, respectively, and with this opinions as to the direction Presi.. dent ‘Roosevelt may be expected to the it is to be assumed nized radical leanings, was one of the main critics against the President’s program of seizing the gold held by the federal reserve Democrat and also former fairs of as dominant the in the secretary ‘of the treasury, in fighting that pro- af- Borah of Idaho, as being a death senténte to the man.with a small business. On the other hand, I asked in a good many places whether the principle of NRA was revolutionary in the sense of a general change in our economic life, and everywhere Will the answer was that actually NRA ‘proposes to give business more power to manage itself. This is the attitude of General Johnson, NRA boss. The codes, he says, are for still exist, although the Cape-to. Cairo railroad, which crosses the river less than half a mile below the falls, .{s rapidly dispelling them. “Notwithstanding the magnitude of Victoria falls, the first view of them is disappointing. Although they ‘are nearly a mile in width and 400 feet in height, the grandeur of their proportions is eclipsed by the sudden disappearance of the river, as it plunges into a narrow, rocky fissure extending across its entire width. Only at a single central point vision. the purpose of having business manage itself by men of its own choosing with only a little government supervision. ‘With the agricultural adjustment administration, the AAA, answers to my queries were different. Most everyone views the AAA-as being wholly revolutionary, aS compared with our traditional dealing with indeed, an such methods problems. outright of It is, overturning of our established principles. Under the principle of AAA the federal government is laying spécia] taxes ‘on special classes for the benefit of a special-class. Whether you agree that the nation’s agriculture must ~ be saved by that manner or whether your conclusions hold such meth} ods of taxation to be discriminatory, the fact remains that the AAA is based. on class taxation. In supporting ing that legislation and in Wallace and Admin- Secretary giv- istrator Davis a free hand to develop the new scheme, Mr. Roosevelit. is regarded by the political stu- dents as having gone as far to the left as the most radical could de‘gire, short only of actual governaa management of the industry. e¢ The is Tennessee another agency A Step to ; the Left purely & Valley authority that might held to be be a long step to the left by the ident. That government ownership government ness. *« participation in It is to be remembered Pres- is and busi- that the TVA not only is going to produce nitrates for the farmers, but it is going to produce electricity for the farmers and the residents. of towns and cities. Further, it we find agriculture, setting in the emerald framework of tropic forests, before their beauty can be appreciated. The fas. cination of discovering new and hidden charms from different points of Cornell, now head of inet like Secretary Swanson, of the navy, Secretary Dern of war, and some of their subordinates who, nevertheless, exercise important executive functions. All of which leads certainly to one conclusion, that there is in this New Deal an adventure into new realms of administration. Where it will lead only history can record. @® by Western Newspaper Union. — yard is the plan by which the government hopes to put the aviation industry on its feet and simultaneously provide a great reserve weapon for national defense. Eugene Vidal, director of aeronautics for the Department of Com. merce, is in charge of the program. most of which emanated from his remarkably imaginative brain. “While much of it may seem little more than a dream at first thought, Vidal is going about all of it in a very practical way. So practical, in fact, that he has swung the very | sound business men in charge of distribution. of .government relief funds around to his way of think- ing to such an extent that they have agreed to let him. have up to $10,- Right of Teacher. _to Paddle Upheld actually farm credit administration, has been of the left wing for years. Balancing off these, there are distinctly conservative men in the cab-. Planes. Washington.—A broad aviation program ranging from gigantic seadromes dotting the oceans down to small airports in every village and cheap planes in almost -:very back- Lewis lines; Professor Warren, who has stood closer to the President than any other, although not in an official post, is credited with being responsible for the monetary revision policy—the 60-cent dollar, which is now upon us, and Dr. William L Meyers, never satis-_ fied. No matter what he bought, the -horses never seemed quite speedy enough for him. Finally, Caleb heard of a very fast team in the West and immediately left by train to try to buy them. At © the end of a week who should drive in but Caleb with could see the prettiest of horses that man on. I mighty More and more, simplicity of _Laneaster, Pa.—The ‘right of a school teacher to administer de. an old-fashioned paddling to un ‘ruly students was upheld recent ly by a jury in Quarter Sessions ‘sign is giving way to elaborated detail in the fashioning of milady’s nightrobes. Especially is the vogue of the sleeveless nightgown passing. court. Ruth The newer models in some instances have wrist-length sleeves which appear almost quaint and amusing in contrast to the sans-sleeve types advocated these many seasons past. A compromise between sleeveless and long-sleeved is the gown which has a tiny cap sleeve effect as here pic tured, for it is fashion’s decree that shoulders must .be covered. The pretty model illustrated is fashioned of chardonize, a soft lovely weave which is particularly adapted to lingerie needs, since it launders beau tifully, always retaining its the falls is in May, when the seeth- ches. At the same elevation and ing torrents are at their flood. ‘No- about the same dates in 1933 it. vember, also, has its attractions. was from ten ee to thinty-six when the river is low, for then the inches. -chasm {is comparatively free from LAS VEGAS, NEV.—The road mist, disclosing vistas and views connecting the Boulder dam. with -; of the great abyss. of rare beauty. Kingman, Arizona, will be extendwhich before were wholly obscured ed soon, according to word received by the whirling columns of spray. here. The highway will include one “The bridge of the Cape-to-Cairo | bridge 160 feet rae and several railroad. is the favorite point selectdeep cuts, — ed by artists, as the picture through the narrow gap at Danger. Point exMT. ‘PLEASANT, UT. _ Births in hibits the full extent of the angry this city. were almost double the waters as they leap from the preei- number of deaths in 1933. The anpices to the abyss below. | nual report of vital statistics shows “There is a hotel near the raik that 77 babies were born here last way. From its verandas an ob- year—42 boys and 35 girls. There server can behold a magnificent ex- quisite silken sheen. The stylizing of this gown with a fichu-like effect which develops into cap sleeves is oe interesting. when Weitzel, teacher, it acquitted. a country of charges Mrs schoo! of spanking twelve-year- -old John Wasser. lein. we ; The youngster testified from the stand that the teacher -“stroke a paddle on me and bounced me up and down on the. chair hard.” Then schoolmates also testified. John .was said to | “have become involved in a fight when he attempted to separate two other youths who were fighting. In charging the jury, Judge Benjamin ©. Atless said: “J am still one of the old-fash1oned kind who Beers that: paddling is necessary.” : were 63 babies born here in 1932. panorama of the canyon and Batoka gorge. A walk of half a mile brings! one to the ‘place where the rain is born,’ as the natives call the Rain OGDEN, UT.—A medical and dental service has been launched by the Ogden ‘medical relief organization. Only those on relief rolls are forest. This is a phenomenon of to be granted this service. Plans of rare beauty and interest, especially to the botanist, for here the tropic the organization call for medical care to be limited_to the home, with heat and constantly falling spray no hospitalization or nursing fees produce a wealth of vegetation of allowed. wonderful luxuriance and variety. “But the most thrilling scene is}. PROVO, UT. —Acute eases needfrom the eastern extremity of the ing immediate medical attention, Rain forest at Danger point, where among families’ on relief rolls, will the treacherous vines and grasses. be cared for under the new medical clinging to the rocks with hungry. relief organization which is in efdesperate roots, tempt one to the fect in Utah county. Every doctor very verge of the precipitate cliffs in the county, under the plan, will that seem to tremble with the ter. become part of the system in conriffic shock of the cataract. So nection with the CWA nursing dense here at times is the mass of system. vapor hurled from the seething caul. dron that the sun’s rays can no longer penetrate. it, and complete darkness envelops one as he is deluged by the downpour, while the terrific thunder of the falls drowns all other sounds and voice inzudible.” makes his own To Build 3,000 Airports in U. S$. Towns woman would remake our economic struc. ture along his own professorial Rainbows. visit can adequately re- many-sided views of their exquisite face a flock of left-wing adherents. Professor Tugwell, an assistant of Forests and single at Cheap Douglas, director of the budget, an Arizona copper magnate, almost directly tied with “Wall Street,” as New. York’s financial interests are termed, and Jesse Jones, of Texas, chairman of the gigantic Reconstruction Finance corporation, a banker, a big business man, a congervative in almost every sense. Then, when you get into the list of professors who have been influential in administration affairs, you secretary Vie- veal the fullness of their charm, but in the cabinet, although on labor questions she has been more to the advisers, of the Government Board Also Aims Secretary left than to the right. Morgenthau, now in the treasury, cannot be catalogued otherwise than a left winger. Going further among the Presi- dent’s first sight repeated excursions may be made to their islands and precipices, their grottoes and palm gardens, their rain forests and projecting crags. their rainbows and cataracts and head of the La- and the only On Rain “No His wife is a Republic- bor department in this fis’ toria falls one involuntarily exclaims, ‘Oh, how beautiful!’ but they lack the: majesty of Niagara. in belief, and)Cor- Perkins, is there a breach sure through which the falls can be geen and appreciated in their -full proportions, where the converging waters rush madly to the zigzag canyon below. “So. restricted is this view that there is an entire absence of that awe-inspiring and almost paralyzing effect which strikes the visitor dumb with wonder and amazement when Niagara bursts on his near an member of the Illinois legislature. But despite his previously accepted left-leaning, Secretary. Ickes is regarded in Washington as conservative in most respects. So is Secretary fast horses, but he was already team ever laid eyes that Caleb was proud aa Livingstone in Southern Rhodesia dell Hull, secretary of state, who was ‘never inclined to any of the new untried schemes or dreams of the left wing of the party. Secretary Ickes,. of the Interior department, was a campaigner for Theodore Roosevelt as a bull moose candidate. 8. BOISH, IDA—Protests of west- -CAP-SLEEVED GOWN and a boy, Nathaniel of them. They had he confided to me— a deadly fear of thunderstorms. No one could complain on the score ‘of | {| ern woolgrowers and livestock men their speed, for they passed a numat curtailment of predatory animal ber of fast trains on the way home. control by the department. of agriOne day about an hour after Caleb These six senoritas,are dressed in the cellophane costumes they wore at the first cellophane dress style culture workers will probably be had left to drive to town I ‘saw a show in Nogales, Mexico, mome of the girls carried bags made of cellophane ‘and others wore yaoi of effective, it appears from a report thunderstorm coming up ‘in thé West. that President Roosevelt has asked _ the same material, Remembering what he had told me congress to appropriate $328,540 for ‘of his horses’ fear I waited uneasily predatory. animal and rodent cone for him. The storm came nearer. and of view grows on the visitor and trol. nearer and finally I- could hear the becomes one of its greatest attracroar of the rain as it came ina solid: tions. . JUNCTION, UT.—An inspection sheet down the road towards me. “As the rainy season commences was made on the range between Then I made out Caleb. The wagin Rhodesia in November and con- Thompson creek and Monroe canon was about 10 feet ahead of the. tinues in the form of tropical show. yon which shows snow measurerain as I ran to open ‘the barn doors. ers until April, the best time to see ments of from four to eighteen in- To Erect Bronze Statue of Noted Explorer. in training cent. collections I was county building in Salt Lake City. | only. one fault, nation. been attacked by such liberals or radicals as Senators Nye of North Dakota, Norris of Nebraska, and 75 per SALT - LAKE CITY, UT.—Five branch offices for iSsuing automobile licenses will be opened in. Utah as follows: Brigham City, Logan, Ogden, Provo and the city and vision of the bill. Then, we have seen the spectacle 1 of Senator Arthur Robinson, an InAli of us recognize that there are diana Republican, who cannot be certain of the President’s policies, called conservative by anybody, in thus “far. developed; that are decid- the role of broadcasting a warning edly radical, as measured by the that Mr. Roosevelt wants to be a Washington.—David Livingstone course of the nation in previous dictator like Mussolini, of Italy, and years. Yet, the men and women Hitler, of Germany. The Indiana . will be honored soon by a bronze statue to be erected in Victoria Falls _ with whom I have consulted point Robinson has assailed President beside. Park, Southern. Rhodesia, out that among his policies are Roosevelt in vicious fashion. Durthe great waterfall which he disthose that have been fostered traing these same days when the Incovered in 1855. ditionally by those who call themdiana Robinson .was pointing out The noted explorer and mission. selves conservative, how he could see the President movary is- depicted with cane in one I found the same results in ining toward a dictatorship, there was hand, Bible in the othe:, and field quiries about his advisers. Some of Senator Joe T. Robinson of ArkanThe statue glasses at his side. them iong have been known as radisas, an old-time conservative Demowill be placed so that it constantly eals; some of them have stood with crat, serving valiantly as the Preswill be bathed with mist and spray the conservatives, and with it all ident’s leader in the senate. The from the roaring waterfall below. some of his advisers heretofore have Arkansas Robinson has managed all “Victoria falls is the most fa-been known as Republicans, some Rooseveltian maneuvers in the senmous scenic attraction and one of have been found in the two major ate, whether they led to the aight the most unusual geographical fea_ politi¢al “parties: at different times, or the left. tures of the continent of Africa,” and some are old-time Democrats. And so it is in the house of repsays a bulletin from the National it is apparently a new political resentatives. There is Speaker Geographic society. ‘Geographers party, but still under the DemocratRainey of Illinois, always known as consider it one of the three greatic label. a Democrat of radical leanings. ; * * & est waterfalls in the world, rivaled Alongside him is working Repreonly by Niagara in North America When one takes a look at the sentative Byrns of Tennessee, as and Iguazu in South America. AlPresident’s policies, the things he Democratic leader in the house. Mr. though a score of other waterfalls has done under Byrns has been catalogued as conLet Business the guise of lead- servative through his long term of excel it In. height, ‘Victoria possesses ing the country Among the house and sen- | many aspects which at once set it service. apart. Manage Itself out of the depresate committee- chairmen, the same gion, an attempt to analyze his leanLacks Majesty of Wiidaaral : mixture may be seen. -fngs to the right or the left becomes “From immemorial times an at *¢ * more difficult. For example, the mosphere of mystery and superstiOne may carry the analysis into 4 Democratic party long has fought | tion has hung over these African the cabinet and find much the against - trusts, big combinations, falls. Livingstone had the greatest same circumbig business generally. Yet, it was difficulty in persuading his follow. Secrestance. As tothe President Roosevelt who projected ers to accompany him, as they be ‘aty Wallace, of lieved the region to be the home Cabinet the NRA into our economic strucagriculture, a son ture with an appended statutory of monsters and devils of destruc. of a former Republican secretary of provision that. anti-trust laws shall tion. Vestiges of these traditions agriculture, is of the left wing, but not operate against corporations he cannot go along with the radical - and businesses- that agree to opideas of inflation. He says that won’t erate under the codes of NRA. solve the problems of the farmer. (he Democratic party always talked By CHERIE NICHOLAS the There is “Big Jim” Farley, ‘about protecting the little man, a postmaster general, a conservative small business. But the NRA- has considered When Cole of Lysander, N. Y., relates, I worked on a farm for a man by the name of Caleb Stimson. He did agreat deal of buying and selling of | 2. banks. Senator McAdoo is a former secretary of the treasury, and stood sol- idly with Senator Glass, a Virginia that he is aligned with the radical group, and if his advisers are to be catalogued as leaning to the right, the conservative element must be Veracious Driver Hangs Up “Some” Record. state at the delinquency date, $13,113,072, it is computed in the office of the state tax commission. of the dol- yet they have velt candidacy and a man of recog- head in his administration of affairs of our nation. The real way to judge, it appears, is by classification of his advisers. If they are of - the left wing, devaluation had the support of some of the conservatives, with sharp criticism coming at the same time from the ranks of radicals. For example, Senator McAdoo, of California, one of the chief supporters of the Roose- change has come an application for them to our own political set-up. Lately, I have been inguiring of many political. leaders for their Readers indicated‘ in reports from 21 counties, there was collected in. the the TVA to the fact that it will permit little or no competition in the areas where it operates, and if it fails to make expenses the taxpay- opinion. The expressions have become s0 common that newspapers and other Busy ‘SALT LAKE CITY, UT.—From the Utah general property tax bill of $17,484,097 in 1938, according to is going to engage in selling equipment that uses. electricity, such things as washing machines, electric irons and other equipment for the household. Attention also might cable disfrom Eu- for 45 PER CENT OF TAX AUTO LICENSE OFFICES RODENT CONTROL FUND SNOW SUPPLY SMALL MEDICAL RELIEF PLAN National Topics Interpreted _ the end of the World war, patches KEPT ONE JUMP. AHEAD OF RAIN Intermountain News TILT Stiesionnnne teabe]hdotblet ttle iy ‘Mexican Beauties RECORD When I looked again, the horses were coming faster than’ the fastest ex- ° press train and the rain had not gained an inch. The lightning, how- ever, was flashing all about and in particular about the wagon tires, completely. encircling them, j _ They were regular rings of fire. * -] was paralyzed with fear, Caleb ~ couldn’t dently did Moundsville, W. Carson, commander Legion post here, in France when his army airplane crashed in action. His family was advised of his death through a cler. ical error. that! he went danger for -back, he told me he had Or a Hobby After fifty, perhaps a best thing, rut ts the eae | To quickly relieve chapping, roughness, cracking. apply soothing. “eee Mentholatum. are co-operating in the federal government’s wheat reduction plan have received checks totaling $10,000. The total to be paid out in Salt Lake county is more than and Tooele county farmers ceive around $20,000. $30,000 will Face Full of Pimples’: re- 250,000 sheep and 12,000 cattle and horses were grazed in the Targhee national forest during 1933. A max- to furnish, pictures to prove that he was killed like spent, but in doing so he had driven more than. 200 miles outside the we state. I need hardly say that’ “Caleb’s passion for fast horses was by now. fs But he never _ eo completely satisfied. Maga- | | sold this team.—Pathfinder zine, SALT LAKH CITY, UT. —Salt Lake county wheat farmers, who ‘very Va.—William T.: of the American has letters and saw.the come No fee is paid for the ex- | . imum of 11,790 head of cattle and Spokane.—Something that. might| horses were permitted to graze and seem a little revolutionary to Little 218,493 head of sheep. The actual Bo Peep in the way of sheepherdnumber grazed is below maximum, ing has been put into use by Paul a difference of 12,617 in the sheep Cox, who runs a large band of and 45 in cattle and horses. sheep near Pennawawa, on the SALT LAKE CITY UT.—ApproxMr. Cox’s flock grazes | Snake river. about 35 miles by automobile from imately $15,000 was added to monthhis winter home, but by boat it- is ly payrolls of Salt Lake when 125 machinists and car workers returned only 11. miles. to work at the Denver & Rio Grande As a result he. puhdess. in aoe Western Raijroad shops recently. kane a $1,200 speed boat, in which “he travels back and forth from the “Traffic has shown a substantial inerease during the past 90 days,” sheep camp to his home with Str plies for his sheepherders,. es ey | the: traffic manager stated, in exIn the summer his range is on the plaining~ the increase in eee Coeur d'Alene, ment. shores ‘of Lake Idaho, ‘and. he will transport the EPHRAIM, UT.—Hphraim city | boat there for Summer duty. -The plans to establish a tree nursery. launch is one of the finest -made, The purpose of the nursery will be makes high speed and is Sina. West Virginia b Man Has “ Proof. That He Is Dead barn kept ahead of the storm until it was amination of children in the child health recovery program. 000,000 of public and civil works funds. miles northwest of ‘this city, have The final amount will rest with moved 2300 cubie yards of gravel the number of men that can be em- for surfacing and 1200 cubie yards ployed. The relief funds adminis- for leveling the field. Three crews trators think in terms of how many of 77 workers and 30 teams are en-men are put to work; Vidal thinks gaged in the project. in terms of how aviation can i OGDEN, UT.—Between July 1 brought back to life. and December 31, 1933, the work of The result probably will a the the bureau of public works in Ogsame no matter how the figuring is den showed a great increase over done—men will go to work and work done in the same period of aviation will advance.any previous year, according to His questionnaire has developed the. district engineer. the fact that there are 14,000: liPRICE, UT. Jetentyibiebe perceased pilots in this country and 11,000 student pilots—25,000 pilots: mits for buildings, involving the expenditure of around 18. thousand in all. But, there are only 7,000 dollars were issued in 1933, accordaircraft available for these 25,000 ing to the annual report of the city trained fliers. This condition exists building inspector. because of the high: price of aircraft, he says. # “S$T, ANTHONY, IDA—Nearly equipped. in the by the barn like a streak and was not seen for several’ days. When he — Could Not Go _ Anywhere — . POCATELLO, IDA.—CWA ~ employees at the Pocatello airport 7 Keeps Track of Sheep by Use of Speed Boat drive He would set it on fire, But he evi- _ small free of charge ‘cost, suitable or at a young shade trees for planting about town | to replace the old trees’ that rapidly being cut down. - are so OGDEN UT.—An average of *$2500 has been loaned to property owners. through the federal Home Owners’ Loan corporation branch in Ogden. A total of 186 loans have heen made in the Ogden district. Healed 1 by by Cuticura “My pce was full of hard, red : pimples. My skin was very sore and , red and I could not go anywhere without everybody looking at me. The pimples were very itchy and I scratched them until they bled. I lost. my night’s sleep So Bony times : I was disgusted, “T tried different things, but with: oe ‘out success. I happened to see-an a advertisement for Cuticura Soap and ©© . Ointment and sent for a free sample I bought more and. after I had used: -" three cakes of. Cuticura Soap and - two boxes of Cuticura Ointment my face was completely healed.” (Signed) Miss Anna Krouchick, 430 Emmett St., Scranton, Pa. Soap Be. Ointment 25 and BO. Taleum 25c. Sold everywhere. One sample each free. Address: “Cutieura Laboratories, iis R, ee Mass.”—Adv. Salt | Lake of § Newest je TEMPLE SQUARE 200 Rooms 200 Tile Baths : | i Snes Just opposite Mormon Tabernacle : eS ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Mgr. :° | ~ |